cpj0514.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 9 (November 29, 1990)

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Limited 'a ccessibility for challenged

cn8

by Claire Littlewood

Is Evergreen accessible to people
with limited mobility? Curtis Hays, who
is in his first quarter at Evergreen and
who is restricted to a wheelchair, says,
"For' the most part Evergreen is pretty
accessible." However he lives off campus
and all his classes are in the Library
building.

STATug
QUO.' .I.

J

trust

Curtis said his main source of
contention was with the CRC, as there
are no handicapped shower facilities and
he would really like to swim three or
four times a week. Curtis reflected, "I
feel ' like I'm not able to take full
advantage of my academic sorjoum:' He
went on to say that he has made the
CRC staff aware of his needs, but "things

)"oL(r

desi res ...

Evergr.een has made an effort to make all facilities accessible to physically
challenged ,individuals. In some areas, such as this Library women's room,
the efforts have been successful, while in others work remains to be done.
'
photo by Claire Uttlewood

Point

NO MEMORY
The memories always fade
While the movie continues playing
The children pick daisies by the road,
Liberty has come and gone
The soldiers take the dawn
And the people go down beneath the iron load.
The president has-been razed
His televised specter begging to save
While he enslaves the peasants by the whole,
The preacher yells loud and true
His words so evil they live as ruled
THe generals are brazen
From the weapons that they stole.
. While the whole fucking mess
Spills on the concrete floor
A Salvadoran baby dies, unblessed
In the mud of a bleeding shore,
And the timid millions speak out
To save the poor, to save the damned
Yet we all forgot what happened in Viet Nam.

of 'VieW

I

Managing Enrollment Growth

Lignt spfash.es co(Jly in
'On perfect!' she says.
'Mmmm foo~ good,' r,e says.
;;tnd from tne warmtn I am s{iti.
'They carry me witn prick
Into the fignt,

'Let us'give our tnankJ,' fie intones
::Head d'ownwara and h.anas crossed,
rr1iey tlianf.:. the Creator for me.
It is our nature, innate, to 6e wanted.
I am wanted.
5tnd I give my tfulnkJ.

Where is the end to this hypocrisy
. Can we blow it out with the aristocracy
Or do we find it in our hearts
To stop and declare NO MORE,
Where is the end to the ir:lSanity
Do we blow ourselves to hell
And call it reality
Or do we find it in our hearts
To stop the world war.
Jonathan Daniel
Page 16 Cooper Point Journal November 15,.1990

'Etfwara MaHin III

trained to be aware and support those '
with disabilities. "In the hiring process
we discuss needs of disadvantaged
people, and we require that employees
have an awareness or experience."
Julie noted that the security gate in
the lobby of the Library is a problem and
the Library staff have to be aware to aid
people exiting or entering the Library.
Sabine Riggins, a . Security officer,
acknowledged the back-up role Security
plays in aiding people with access
difficulties, "Most of the doors we have
to help people with are either in the
Library or CAB." She commented that
since the automatic doors have been
installed access has been much easier.
Sabine also said while Red Square
was being dug up it proved a tremendous
inconvenience to students, especially to
the handicapped. Sabine commended the
facilities folk who, "did their best to reroute."
.
Apparently much of the campus still
needs to be worked on before it's
completely handicapped accessible. For
example, the first set of doors in the
main entrance of the CRC are automatic,
but the second set are not, leaving
handicapped individuals trapped between
two sets of doors. The admissions office
needs an automatic door. "And it's still
quite a challenge gerung from main
campus to the donns," commented Sharon
McBride.
.
Claire Littlewood is a remarkably
dependable writer for the CPJ.

Evergreen dilemma: To grow or not to grow'?-

It is ciar/( after fife
1"or si;c fwurs at 375 aegret-s 1"alirenlieit
Until I am an even goUen Drown.
1{ic.li1y 6a.sting in my own juices,
rr1ie metal wa£fs andglowing coif.si
'I1iey comfort me.

'J14iere I see the faces upturned,
'Young and oU aliKf-,
'Their smning Kttives raisuf aloft,
'Their eyes upon me,
'Wanting mej
1Ikufing me .

just seem to be taking a long time to get
done, and I'm stressed and ready to
strangle." Curtis said exercise is a way
for him to release tension, and it is
frustrating not to have the equipped
facilities to allow him to exercise. "I'm
going to keep trying to make an
influence," he said.
There are some inconsistencies across
campus, but several staff members are'
committed to improving accessibility.
Laura Barrett, who works in facilities,
and Sharon McBride of Access Services
worked on alternative wheelchair access
routes on campus during the excavation
of Red Square:
Sharon emphasized . the need for
improving alternative routes complete
with automatic doors, operable elevators,
and safe routes. She commented on the
complication of the · Admissions office
being located without an automatic door,
while Evergreen encourages a diverse
student body. "I've just written them a
memo, but these things take a while. You
put in memos and then wait two to three
years, ~use of the budget process."
Julie Hebert, head of circulation in
the LibrarY, said accessibility in the
Library is "much improved." Julie
commented ' on the check-out desk has
recently been installed and which is eye
level for people in wheelchairs: "Not only
does this mean more user accessibility
but ~so provides potential for hiring a
handIcapped person." She also stressed
that all employees in the Library are

Random buzzing human christmas shopping
Swanning snowballing orgy of
Self stifling collectivism worship
Dripping off an aged face
Of mother watch that child commandments
Thinking in place of your free will
Rattle off
'
"I love you - need you, so I own you."
November 22nd, 1990 has big monster genius crushing feet
And at the mall the young plump chested femmes
Are Madonna Looks alikes "Let me be your lucky star."
Out goes Paol Klee, Kate Bush, and Gunter Grass;
Out gushing chopped off vital signs of life
Spewing onto the colors of KUBE bumper stickers
Expelled at bust upon genius crushing
november 22.
.
"So what?" - Julie Brown
"Breathtaking" - The Olympian
Luke Turner

The college faces pressure for
enrollment growth. It appears likely that
enrollment preSsure will increase during
the next 10 years. Factors contributing to
this pressure inclUde:
.Thurston County is among the five
or ten fastest growing counties in the
country. The county population is forecast
to increase by 24% by 2000, amounting
to growth of approximately 37,000.
.Evergreen's appeal to prospective
students has increased each year for the
past 'five , years. The demand for
enrollment has exceeded state-funded
ceilings for the last three years.
.National and state demographic
forecasts indicate a substantial increase in
the traditional college-bound age group
beginning in the mid-l990s. Enrollment
at both community college and four-year
iriStitutions is expected to increase sharply
beginning in 1995. The traditional
college-age (17-22) population in the state
is forecast to increase by 100,000
between 1995 · and 2006. A dramatic
upturn in the 23-29 year-old population is
forecast to begin at the turn of the
century, yielding ' a gain of more than
40,000 persons by 2006. State population
forecasts indicate steady growth among
both age cohorts through the year 2010.
. ·The state and the Higher Education
Coordinating Board have . identified
current ulUnet eduqltional .needs among
"place-bound" adultS in the state's urban
areas and expect me College to meet
some portion of that unmet need in
Thurston and southern Pierce counties.
Yet, -, ilS a consequence of enrollment
. demand among full-time students in
. excess of state-mlmdated ceilings, our
own service to part-time students has

A brl-ef I-ntro
by Scott Richardson, Managing Editor

Periodically, to detennine a course
for the college, a Strategic Planning
Council is fonned at Evergreen. DUring
the 1989-1990 academic year a council of
administrators, staff, faculty, and students
drafted several documents to infonn and
guide decision makers.
The article which follows is the result
of the Planning Council's researCh on
managing enrollment growth, and was '
completed last sPring. Interim Provost
Russ Lidman, who replaces Patrick Hill
as . chair of the Strategic Planning
Council, emphasizes this document is still
a work in progress.
The PC will ' reconvene for the flfSt
time this academic year on December 5,
and continue to develop this synthesis of
facts and options.
,
Director of Institutional Research and
Planning Steve Hunter, who remains on
declined markedly · at the very time
responsiveness to such students has
gained statewide attention.
·The legislature · continues to
scrutinize Evergreen's comparatively
higher cost-per-student · which could l?e
reduced by enrollment growth.
·Generated by the reaction to costs
of new construction, the HEC Board
commissioned studies of space utilization
on existing campuses. Evergreen and
HEC Board staff are' currently negotiating
the number of additional FTE students
which could be .accommodated at
Evergreen without new construction. At
this
time, estim~ '" range fro~ ,

the PC from last year, explained that
given the nwnber of interim appointments
in place at Evergreen, it would "not be
appropriate to complete the Strategic Plan
in the next couple of years." The PC
hopes to develop further the introductory
and historical section this year. Later, the
various options can be explored for
benefits and shortcomings for the
institution. The completed docwnent will
be a kind of briefing paper fOll tbose who
eventually flll positions now interim in
nature (e.g. president, provost, and
others). It is intended to be used as a
long-tenn guide, perhaps beginning with
the 1994-1996 budget.
Meanwhile, what follows is subject to
some
change.
Student input
is
encouraged; there may be an opportunity
for students to serve on the Strategic
Planning Council. And the PC would like
to gain community response to the issue
of managing growth. Steve Hunter in
L3131 (x6567) is willing to answer your
questions.
I
approximately 150 to 450 FfE.
.HEC
Board
staff
have
recommended a growth
rate of
approximately 35 students per year for
the next 20 years at Evergreen. That rate

Internal Seepage
Nevada test protest
Nlsqually threatened
World AIDS Day
Memorial
Mystery interview
Monster shrimp destroyed

of growth would bring us to head count
enrollments of 3,581 in 2000 and 3,931
in 2010. Head count enrollment for fall
quarter 1989 was 3,237. While the HEC
Board has not ' adopted the staff
recommendation yet, it has approved the
general direction of this proposed growth
plan.

3200 FTE Target
In the previous planning process,
3200 FIE was identified as a target
enrollment which allowed "duplicative
depth" in the faculty and expansion of
the curriculwn in necessary areas.
Evergreen's 1991-93 Budget Request
brings us to that target enrollment.
Evaluation of the feasibility of a
Weekend/EveningCollege enrolling 400600 FIE students will occur during the
1991-93 biennium. That evaluation
contains the possibility of concluding that
growth beyond 3200 FIE take the fonn
of a Weekend/Evening College, that a
Weekend/Evening College is not feasible,
or that it should not be additional to the
3200 FfE.
The most recent space study
conducted by Mike Beug and Ken
Winkley concludes that a new building
will be required even to accommodate

see growth, page 14 .
Under the Evergreens

3
3
4
6
7
7

A Stranger's Hquse

Animation festival
Intergalactic whiner
Infamous noise bands
Calendar
Comics

7
10
11
11
12
13
15

t

The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA ~505
Address Correction Requested

Non-profit Organization
U.s. Postage Paid
Olyinpia, WA 98505
Permit No. 65

-,

··o' U'. t
A Day ·weth
. I
Art, December 1
SEATILE--On Saturday, December
I, the Northwest arts community will join
with artists and arts organizations
.nationwide to rem.ember friends and
colleagues who have died or are persons
living with AIDS ; Coinciding with the
World Health Organization's third annual

News

NEWS BRIEFS
Quote of the Week
.

government to close the Kazakhstan test
site. the Soviet Union has not conducted
any nuclear tests since October 19,1989.
. For more iriformation, contact:
Washington
Physicians for
Social
Responsibility, 547-2630, Seattle; Sixth
Sense, 272"5204; Tacoma.

'We're concentrating more on get,t ing
use. d to working with our legs."
Lance Marine Cpl. Richard Biggers, interviewed in the
November 26 Christian Science Monitor, when asked
about training for Operation Desert Shield.

~s ~:ar~~=~~aYloDA~I=O~~

Estuary~

movement--now hundreds and thousands
S$1"Qng--to pr:essure . d!e ' Golbachev

threatened . by' developmeilt

by Jason Madsen
Don't let the Middle East Crisis keep
your back turned · to local issues, . the
Nisqually Delta needs our help. Lone Star .
Northwest . has proposed to open the
wgest gravel mine in the state' directly
nerth of the ' delta. They. intend run a
conveyer. belt down Sequalitchew Creek
to a wharf. Eighty percent of the gravel
will go oQt by barge from the wharf and
twenty percent will go out by truck.
Where is that eighty percent going, you ,
might ask? Well, they haven't said y.et '
but here's an interesting fact. Lone Star
is 97.5% owned by Onada Cement of
Tokyo. Make your best guess.
The effects this project would have
on the delta would be awesome. Lone
Star seeks a 24-hour permit for their
dock facility which means lights and/or
horns around the clock in an area that is

Recreation for
the challenged

achievements and lives of artists who ' l!:::=:=
' ==:==~~=7::==:=======:=;:=:=:==::=::=~=~~~-~~~
EVERGREEN--For many ~ple here
have died and to acknowledge tl'!e a placard explaining their observances. unacceptably delayed establishing its own
at Evergreen recreation is a great outlet
devastating iinpact on .the ' nation's The Philandros Singers of Seattle Men's disposal site, Gov. Booth Gardner
for the byproducts of being il studeitt
creative communities. Organizers hope to
Chorus will observe a minute of silence announced November 13. The Michigan
(stress,
tension"
depression,
etc.).
encourage action to cure and care for all
during their performance in Olympia.
ban, which began on November 10, is
Actually, recreation can play a part in
also going into effect at the only other
any person's life as a healthy way to
people with AIDS and to educate the .
disposal sites in the United States, in
stimulate their body and mind. For a
public ·.about HIV infection.
In Seattle, the ' Northwest AIDS
South Carolina and Nevada. Federal law
variety of reasons, recreation ill Evergreen
Foundation will co-sponsor a candlelight
requires states to either take care of their
is not as ·accessible as it could be. So,
procession beginning at 6 pm at the
OLYMPlA--The state of Washington own wastes or form regional low-level
with the community's input, David
Broadway MarKel
' '
. has "reluctantly" decided to exclude waste compacts to share the burden of
Nyberg is trying to enhance this part of
an im]
... In Olympia, the Washington State Michigan wastes from the low-level disposing 'the nation's low-level nuclear . Evergreen and offer recreation to people
birds.
Arts Commission will cover the art in nuclear waste disposal site at Hanford
wastes. However, the three states that do
who now- find barriers between
Oi
the
Midwest
state
has have disposal sites have been granted
themselves and what the school has to ·
their offices and tiililding and will !;lesign because
barges
permission to refuse the waste of states .offer. He would like input from people
among
that a,re failing to make progress to locate
with handicaps, but would welcome
(sea-be
their own sites by 1993, when- states will
response from anyone' who cannot (for
of the
be required to manage the,ir own wastes.
any reason) access the variety of
diverse
"The state of Washington strongly
recreational options offefedat Evergreen.
the on
The Security Blotler is compile~rom
Monday, November 19
supports the concept of regional disposal
Please write, call, or drop by the Rec
can be
information cOlllained in the Evergreen 1509: Graffiti found on the CRC wall
sites for these wastes," Gardner said.
Center: David Nyberg, Adapted Rec
can di,
Security Incidelll Log.
between the old and new stairs.
Vermont, New Hampshire, Rhode
Coordinator, CRC-2lO TESC, 866-6Odo
us.
Monday, November 12
2012: The Library roll-up door was
Island, the nistrict of Columbia and
x6770 or voice mail at x6537.
I l
0048: An unconscious woman was found reported to be damaged (hanging lower
Puerto Rico , continue. to be cut off from
on the 3rd floor of the CAB and than normal) due to vandalism.
access to Hanford for failure to adhere
.
.
transported to the Black Hills Hospital by
Tuesday, November 20
to the federal low-level waste law's
I
ambulance.
2327: Hubcaps were reported stolen from
requirements.
The
governors
of
. Tuesday, November 13
a vehicle in the Mod parking area.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New
OLYMPlA--More than 4,000 family
Wednesday, November 21
Jersey, and New York also have been
members of military personnel stationed
1835: Graffiti found in the Li~rary 4th'
.
1009: Fire alarm in the Housing advised that · the1r states may be denied
in the Middle East will send holiday
floor men's restroom.
Wednesday, November 1.4
Community Center.
access to the- J-lanford site because of greetings to their loved ones from the
1858: Graffiti found lit the CAB 2nd 1730: Power outage at TESC and
insufficient progress toward managing
Capitol Rotunda as part of Operation
II
, floor men's restroom.
surround~g area.
their own, wastes.
Cheer. Operation Cheer has added a new
Thursday. November 15
Thursday, November 22
dimension to the Department of General
0817: A woman was reported to be 0307: Fire alarm in A-Dorm.
VI
Administration's ~nuallighting ceremony
1016: TESC student reports bicy
' cle stolen
of the State Capitol Holiday Tree
sleeping in the A-Dorm TV area.
1856: Woman reported to be causing a from unlocked dorm room .
. '
sclieduled for 7 pm Novembet:29 in the
disturbance at The Branch.
-1730: Woman verbally threatens student
TACOMA--The
founder
of
a Capitol Rotunda. The state -has invited
Friday. November 16 .
in the dorm pit area.
movement which forced the Soviet family members of those stationed iIi the
1211: A vehicle was broken into and the
Friday, November 23
government to close its primary nuclear Middle East to the annual ceremony. The
stereo was stolen from F-Lot.
A relatively quiet security day.
weapons test site will be in Tacoma on event will be videolIlped by the House of
- --Jl841:- A-stolell-¥ehicle,-reported, b.y-th.e.e- - -Sa t u r day, No~mberi 24
December 3, to urge Americans to Representatives Media ' Services and the
Seattle Police Department, was seen on 1950: Woman causing '-"aLL,di
.....·~sturb
-an-c-e-m
· - -.df"e·TrIll....aI~ld.f---r.'cluswe of the Ne~pes-give~tUtaiy" wh1ctl willic-,- - - . - - --1-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - campus.
A-Dorm.
where the United · States continues to distribute them to Washington military
Saturday, November 17
Sunday, November 25
explode nuclear ~eapons.
units serving Operation Desert Shield.
0037: Fire alarm in B-Dorm.
2218: A woman was reported to be
Olzhas ~ulell:nenov, leader of the
"This holiday season will be a hard
0041: Fire alarm in A-Dorm.
causing a disturbance in the dorms.
Nevada Semlpalatmsk Move~ent (n~ed time for all those separated by the call to
0208: Burnt food caused a fire alarm in
Monday, November 26
after two ~uclear test SItes), IS a ··active dutY," said K. Wendy Holden, the
0102: Fire alarm in A,Dorm.
renowned ~ter and poet . who ~e.a director of the Department of General
P-Dorm.
'
0300: Student reports assault by three 1022: Woman involved in a verbal
wave of anti-nuclear sentunent In his Administration. "We 'want the family
GO
confrontation in A-Dorm.
native Kazakhstan to a seat on the USSR members to come and feel the warmth of
students in A-Dorm.
0340: A woman was reported to be
Campus Security provided 113 public
Supreme Sov.i~t. Suleimenev ~ill- ~peak the holiday season and the support the
Ca
to Tacoma cItIZens at the tJmverslty' of community has for them. We also want
throwing furniture on the 9th floor of A- services (locks/unlocks, jumpstarts, and
Dorm.
escorts).
Puget Sound on Monday,' December 3, at ' our service men and women to know
400 !
7:30 pm. Suleimenov has used that they are not forgotten and to feel that
Sunday, November 18
0015: A woman was arrested by Thurston
political power, and the power of his same support"

W

he
b
as Ington ans
M- h.
N
t
IC 19an -was e

er then cOme by ~­
md get the details.
>elta is the last nonI in Washington. The
Ie there will be no
goodbye to the
okeries, the prevalent
exotic salt marshes.
e Star. '
is the lone member of

SecnrityBlotter

Operatl-on Cheer
for desert
. troops

I

I

So eet nuc1ear
opponent 's pea"ks

Images
Damaged-' at
. . . . ______. Time of
Filming

TEST
SST SITE
st.

weapons testing.

rTO

)NESS "

COWlty Police for assault.
2133: An untagged dog fOWld in housing
area was placed into TESC kennels.
2326: Fire alarm in N-Dorm.

NATUROPATH
SUZANNE ADAMS, ND.
'I

i

NalUral • s.,partI ••• Noa-tc.1e TIMr....

H_eopalll" • NIdrWoa • Botanical MedIdM
4~·9082

754-5282
513 Capitol Way

GOING-

~

-=PLACES
Books • Maps • Gifts
Foreign Language Resources
Outdoor Recreation
Travel Guides • Cookbooks
Travel Accessories

*

* *
*
* *

Contunporruy Cfotliina
& M~

MisuliJJnia

• Earth Wetches w/ Dolphins
• Earth In 43 Languages
OD 'T's

* *

& Sweats

• Lotsa Cottons
• Exotic Gifts
(1 % for Environment)

Washington Center
December 1, 1990

8:00p.m.

515 SO. WASHINGTON
(across from the WashlngtDn Center)

357-6860

*

Tickets $10
Available at all
Washington Center Ticket Outlets
Or Call 866-0266

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fealuring

Emerald City
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HARD TO FINO
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CONVENIENTLY LOCATED OFF MARTIN WAY

Cooper Pomt Journal November 29, 1990
Page 2 Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

I

Page 3

NEWS BRIEFS
A Day Without
Art, December 1

Estua~ .. threatened· by development

moyement~-now hUndreds and thousands
strong--tO pressure the G«bacIlev
govemmentto close_the~ test
site. The Soviet Union ~ not conducted
any nuclear tests since October 19, 1989.
, For more infoniUltiori;contact:
WashingUln Physicians for Social
Responsibility,., 547·2630, .Seattle; Sixth
Sense, 272~5204, Taco~.

Quote of the Week

SEATILE--On SatUrday I December
I, the Northwest arts community will join
with artists and arts organizations
nationwide to remember fri~ds and
colle-agues who have died or are persons
living with AIDS. Coinciding with the
World Health Organization's third annual
AIDS Awareness Day, DAY WITHOUT
ART is planned to celebrate the
achievements and lives of artists who
have died and to acknowledge the
devastating impact on the nation's
creative communities. Organizers hope to
encourage action to cure and care for all
people with .AIDS and to educate the
public about HIV infection.
In Seattle, the Northwest AIDS
Foundation will co-sponsor a candlelight
procession beginning at 6 pm at the
Broadway Market
In OIYl1!pia, the Washington State
Arts Commission will cover the art in
their offices and building and will design

News

?

'We're concentrating more on getting
used to working with our legs."
Lance Marine Cpl. Richard Biggers, interviewed in the
November 26 Christian Science Monito" when asked
about training for Operation Desert Shield.

.
by Jason .Madsen
. Don't let tile Miadle East Crisis keep
your back turned to local issues, the
Nisqually Delta needs our help. LOne Star
Northwest has p~ to open the
Ilu'gest gravel mine .in the state directly
north of the delta. They intend run a
conveyer belt doWn Seq!l8litchCw Creek
to a wharf. Eighty percent of the gravel
will go out by barge from the wharf and
twenty percent will go' out by truck.
Where is that eighty percent going, you
might ask? .Well, they haven't said yet
but here's an in~sting fact, Lone Star
is 97.5% oWned by Onada Cement of
Tokyo. Make your best guess.
The effects this project would have
on the qelta would be awesome. Lone
Star Seeks a 24-hour pennit for their
dock facility which means lights , and/or
horns around the clock in an area that is
an important resting place for migrating
birds.
Oil and gravel spillage from the
barges would ruin an area rated as being
among the cleanest of all waters. Benthic
(sea-bottom) communities in the vicinity
of the wharf are the most productive and
diverse in the whole delta, yet would be
the ones most greatly affected. All this
can be ours just so a Japanese consortium
can dig up our own gravel and sell it to
us.
] am concerned about the long-tenn
,

Recreation for
the challenged __

. , '

,

EVERGREEN--For many '~ple here
at Evergreen recreation is a great outlet
a placard explaining their observ~nces. unacceptably delayed establishing its own
disposal
site,
Gov.
Booth
Gardner
for the byproducts of .being a student
The Philandros Singers of Seattle--Men's
~epression,
etc.).
announced
November
13.
The
Michigan
(stress,
tension,
Chorus will observe a minute of silence
ban, which began on November 10, is
Actually, recreation can playa part in
during their perfonnance in Olympia.
healthy , way to
also going into effect at the only other
any person's life as
disposal sites in the United States, in
stimulate their body and mind. For a
South Carolina and Nevada. Federal law
variety of reasons, recreation at Evergreen
is not as accessible as it could be. So,
requires states to either take care of their
with the community's input, David
OLYMPIA--The state of Washington own wastes or fonn regional low-level
has "reluctantly" decided to exclude . waste compacts to share the burden of Nyberg is trying to enhance this part of
Evergreen and offer recreation to people
Michigan wastes from the low-level disposing the nation's low-level nuclear
who now
fmd barriers between
nuclear waste disposal site at Hanford wastes. However, the three states that do
themselves and what the school has to
I,
has have disposal sites have been granted
because
the
Midwest
state
plans of Weyerhauser, which has leased
pennission to refuse the waste of states
offer. He would like input from people
,~
the land to Lone Star. Weyerhauser has
written letters to the City of Dupont,
that an: failing to make progress to locate
with handicaps, J>ut would welcome
their own sites by 1993, when states wiu
response from anyone who carinot (for
lands,
which
"administers"
these
be required to manage their own wastes.
any reason) access the variety of
requesting pennission to develop the
"The state of Washington strongly
recreational options offered at Evergreen.
wharf into an industrial/commercial
.
./
dfi
Monday,
November
19
.
supports
'
the
concept
of
regional
disposal
Pl~
write,
call,
or
drop
by
the
Rec
,
superport Presto chango. If this phase
The Security 8 Iotter IS comp' e rom
. '
. C
D'd N be
Adapted R
aVlCRC y210rg,TESC 866 6000
ec
occurred the whole delta would be
information contained in the Evergreen 1509,·. GraffitI' fiound on the CRC wall sites for these wastes," Gardner said.
Center:
di
Security Incident Log.
between the old and new stairs.
Vennont, New Hampshire, Rhode
oor nator,
,dominated by the port, the traffic, the
Monday, November 12
2012: The Library roll-up door was Island, the District of Columbia and
x6770 or voice mail at x6537.
pollution, and the reauired dredlrinlr.
'j
0048: An unconscious woman was found reported to be damaged (hanging lower Puerto Rico continue to be cut off from
on the 3rd floor of the CAB and than nonnal) due to vandalism.
access to Hanford for failure to adhere
transported to the Black Hills Hospital by
Tuesday, November 20
to the federal low-level waste law's
ambulance.
2327: Hubcaps were reported stOlen from
requirements.
The
governors
of
OLYMPIA--More ~ 4,000 family
Tuesday, November 13
a vehicle in the Mod parking area.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New
members of military personnel stationed
Wednesday, November 21
Jersey, and New York also have been
in the Middle · East will .send holiday
1835: Graffiti found in the Library 4th
1009: Fire alarm in the Housing advised that their states may be denied
greetings to their loved ones from the
. floor men's restroom.
Wednesday, November 14
Community Center.
access to the Hanford site because of Capitol Rotunda as part of Operation
Cheer. Operation Cheer has added a new
1858: Graffiti found in the CAB 2nd 1730: Power outage at TESC and insufficient progress toward managing
floor men's restroom.
surrounding area.
their own wastes.
dimension to the Department of General
Thursday, November 15
Thursday, November 22
Administration's annual lighting ceremony
0817: A woman was reported to be 0307: Fire alarm in A-Donn.
:....1_
of the State Capitol Holiday Tree
-,
1016: TESC student reports bicycle, stolen
scheduled for 7 pm November 29 in the
sleeping in the A-Donn TV area.
'
TACOMA--The
founder of a Capitol Rotunda. The state has invited
1856: Woman reported to be causing a from unlocked dorm room.
disturbance at The Branch.
1730: Woman verbally threatens student
movement which forced the Soviet family members of those stationed in the
Friday, November 16
in the donn pit area.
government to close its primary nuclear Middle East to the annual ceremony. The
Friday, November 23
..--,--_weapoDS-tesLsite will he in Tacoma on e...ent--Will-be-vidootapeQ-by-the-H6use:-of'------'';----j--------~
1211: A vehicle was broken into and the
--~s....te""reu-was-sto1en- froi·1T.--i"::t-.l1or--------jh~tively-ll1Iiersecurity-day.
December 3, to urge Americans to Representatives Media Services and the
- - - - - -..
1842, A stolen vehicle. repom.! by the
S.,......,. November 24
demand doswe of the Nevada Test Slle, • tapes given to the military. whiCh wiD
!
~i~
Seattle Police Department, was seen on 1950: Woman causing a disturbance in
where the United States continues to distribute them to Washington military
campus.
b 17
A-Do~day, November 25
explode nuclear weapons.
units serving Operation De~rt Shield.
Saturday, Novem er
2218 • A woman was reported to be
., OIzhas Suleimenov, leader of the
"This holiday season will be a hard
1.
BEER-MAKING
"0037: Fire alarm in B-Dorm.
Nevada Semipalatinsk Movement (named time for all those separated by the call to
'
0041: Fire alarm in A-Donn.
causing a disturbance in the donns.
after two nuclear test sites), is a active duty," said K. Wendy Holden, the
SUPPLIES
J
0208: Burnt food caused a fIre alarm in
Monday, November 26
h rode
0102: Fire alarm in A-Donn.
renowned writer and poet w 0
a director of the Department of General
I
IMPORTED WINE a. BEER
1022: Woman involved in a verbal
wave of anti-nuclear sentiment in his Administration. "We want the family
P-Donn.
GOURMET
COFFEE a. ESPRESSO
0300: Student reports assault by three
native Kazakhstan to a seat on the USSR members to come and feel the warmth of
PETER G. WHITE, C.A.
students in A-Donn.
confrontation in A-Dorm.
'll peak
'
th
th
GREATDEU
r
Covered by Ewrgreen/Hcrtford Insuraice
Campus Security provided 113 public
Supreme Soviet. Suleimenov WI .s
the holiday season and e support e
QUestions • Consultations • AppoIntrnen1s
0340: A woman was reported to be services (locks/unlocks, J'umpstarts; and
to Tacoma citizens at the University of community has for them. We also want
Capital Village
352-8988
Radlanc:e 113 E.5th Olympia 357-9470
Puget Sound on Monday, December 3, at our service men and women to know
throwing furniture on the 9th floor of A400 Cooper Pt Rd
escorts).
7:30 pm. Suleimenov has used that tl\ey are not forgotten and to feel that
Dorm.
Sunday, November 18
political power, and the power of his same support"
0015: A woman was arrested by Thurston
County Police for assault.
2133: An ulftagged dog found in housing
area was placed into TESC kennels.
2326: Fire alarm in .N-Donn.
EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE


t
S eCUrl

a

Washington bans
,Michigan N-waste

Y

B'

l' 0 tter

Operation Cheer
for desert troops'

. ..'

.

'.. . .,

.

-..

"

.

. .

,

...

.

Commentary
There will be more information
available at Lecture Hall 3, Thursday,
November 29, at 7:30 pm when ,Bruce
Fortune from the Nisqually Delta
Association will be speaking and giving
a slide show. We will be writing letters
afterw<lrrl~. If vou can't make it and you

want to write a letter then come by Rdorm, room 208D, and get the details.
The Nisqually Delta is the last nonindustrialized estuary in Washington. The
last. When it' s gone there will be no
more. Don't say goodbye to the
tremendous heron rookeries, the prevalent
harbor seal, and the exotic salt marshes.
Say goodbye to Lone Star.
,
Jason Madsen is the lone member of
the Nisqually Warriors' Allianrp

I

Soviet nuclear
opponen Spei1AS
't

f

ACUPUNCTURE

(

*

PARI'S FOR THE DO-IT YOURSELFER

NATUROPATH
SUZANNE ADAMS, ND :
~

Nalural ' s.,partI••• NoIt-IAIKIc
"_cop.tII,
.
• Botanical Medk:IM
N~

459·9082

CiOING-

~

-::PLACES
Books • Maps • Gifts
Foreign Language Resources
Outdoor Recreation
Travel Guides • Cookbooks
Travel Accessories...

754-5282
513 capitol Way

\ * *
~'tt~'t ~pffo\. * * * •
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Ccmumporruy Cfotliina
MatTIt/Qus Misullania

*
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&

• Earth Watcbes w/ Dolphins
• Earth In 43 Languages
on T's & Sweats

• Lotsa CottollS
• Exotic Gifts
(1 % for Environment)

so. WASHINGTON
(ac ross from the Washington Center)

515

357-6860

Washington Center
December 1, 1910

8:00p.m.
Tickets $10
Available at all

Wtishlngton Center Ticket Outlets
Or Cell 866-0266
Q

Page 2 Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

*

* **
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Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

Page 3

. .:. , _0-'_ .. ___

"

. f

'

,

N:ews

r '. _., ..... - ......... .,;.--.....,.. ...... -. - .. --

-

,

-

.

~---=:"-,-

' -

,,',',

..

,

. _,'

" _.",

.,

,
,"

,,~

.

_"

Day fo~ tnournillgallld :, edu.eati~n .•.
==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;0=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;-'; ;;;;;;;==;;:: andiac ' anonymo~ ,. homosexual or
by DouR Smith
, heteiOsexualp8i1ners. prostitute contacJ!,
On Saturday, ~PlI~r \ v t u n :
", _ .
and Sharing , in~venous drug ' l)eedl~.1!'
will be mourning, u.e ,oSs '0 - _e ' se
, 4...\''' , v, " ,
-, Bddition,
one' shoQld remember ~t
who have died from AIDS and trying to
O~ ·
<)
alcoooland other drugs sev~relyim~
educate the rest or'the world about the
, , ~' ,
judgement, makutg it.difficult to , make ,
worst health care problem in history.
~
_ iiltelligent decisions. 'I'he risk factors, vary
They will be. teaching the pOpulation
,trOm coUntJy tocoUlltJy;because ~
about everything from epidemiology t o .

group-s 'affected v.ary. For.
' •examp,I,e". m
· k-factorS to tl\e law. The 'following is
ns
, AfriCa there in a muchhi~h.erpropo~on an overview of the kinds of material they
,/
,
~
0, f women with AIDS than 10 the UruWd
will be teaching.
()
,'
What is AIDS? Acquired Immune
r'
~ C E ~~ ,
S~tescan you get AIDSfro~"cas~ ·
Deficiency Syndrome (AIi>S) is caused ----======::==~===~~, cOntact"? ' HIV is an incredibly- frilgde
by a virus--human immunodeficiency '~
,
d VlCUS' outs1'de the body, and is deactivated
' virus attacks the human o·
DToups: sexually active . homosex~1 an.th at roo
' S (HIV). ThlS
VlCU
" m temperature. The(efore, ,it can't
system, leaving the bod
. .y blS
' exual males (especially . those dru
WI
l'mmune
be transferred through the - sit; or by
.
suscepu'ble to countless OpportuDlSUC multiple sex partners). intravenous ....g sharing ~n.;ng iltens,ils,: Sin
" ce._the .:VlCUS
'mecu·ons.
Theretiore.
by
its
nature,
users
who
share
inJ'ection
equipment
WIu.
,
~.
l
'sts' in such low concenttations
, , 10
,
the
ers of the above,f eX1
people do not die of AIDS but rather o.f others , sexual
Ie, AIDS can't
saliva of -mV-post·tive
that
attack
thelt hemophiliaCs and other recipients O
.[ll
l'llnesses
the
f be
transmitted by coUghing Or kissing.
bodies-illnesses
that
they
would blood and blood products, and infants 0
. h risk
th
ise
,
be
able
to
fight
off.
The
two
infected
mothers.
('There
is,
however,
a
hig
er
to
ose
otherw
the with orthodontia, which could cause
most common opportunistic infections are
It should be emphasized here that
severe bleeding. This is still an incredibly
pneumosystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) screening of blood d~nors for lilY low risk behavior, though.) mv cannot
and Kaposi's sarcoma. One or the other infection and the appropriate trea~ent of be contracted from public toilets, drinking
shows itself in 75% of patients with overt blood products has now resulted 10 a safe fountains,
telephones,
or
~bl~c
AIDS.
blood supply in this country. ~erefore, transportation. Again, because the VlCUS 1S
What are the symptoms of AIDS?
new cases among hemoph~acs or so fragile that there has to be contact
~sfusion recipients occur W1th great between body flUids. It also cannot be
This question is difficult to answer, since
irregularity.
contracted from a gay friend or
many people with AIDS hav~ no
symptoms, feel. ~~ll, and engage m all
What are the risk factors for AIDS? co-worker (unless there are other factors
their usual acUVlues. The symptoms of ,
uall
AIDS is mOst efficiently involved of course), dental instruments,
PCP are similar to those of other - Sex .y'ed' thro h ,,".i1 ;"t......~ •• -~ "
' , - . - _ .- .L_. nn ;"f.. ,.I .."
. _._ 'n... " "1'1', II rtrv rflnIYh fp.vp.r
transm1tt
illY

,'ft'A'b-"
".

«..

p
' artn

p
' eop

~Vlor. I~YI you co,uld abstain from

sex and not Share needles wlIh aliybody.
However.. ~ this ~'t ~~~/or
most ~le, ~ is a ~~ U~
~
YQU
folloW. ,If yo~iriSiSt Q~ .~~g ,
needles, go to a ' heal~ ~nt -and
get a vial of bleach: 1be~, : ~- ~~e
with, iQstructiQilS -;for Cle~nlOg ,and. , ~ _
proPerly ,.killHIV; There are ~~ m "
'
. S t1 T rna and Vancouver
place
10 eat e, aco
' ,_ " , •
washington, ' fo
name -. a - .few.
,Unfortunately, there is " not. $ , ~e ,
excha!ige or bleachprogramm1b':JfS~
coUntY yet-You can alsO ~u~ yopr
risk by seeking a mutually, m0!lO~~ ,
. not 'possible
relationsh'1p. If thi s lS
" lim1t
be
f
partn
' ' s you have and use
the num r 0 "
er
' '
d ' .... nonoxynol 9 Do not use
a con om W1u.
- .
, . '
ribbed condoms, as they .promote tearlng . A con' dom" 1s an~ e""ecu've
' but not
II'
,
saf
'''od
f
protecu'onThereface
fail- e, meu. 0
' . '
it should not be considered yow: first line
of de&ense aml,m' st AIDS. Th.1S sh.ould
1'
.,....·
all
, come frOm behavior modificatlon. FlO Y
never reuse a condom.
This is a brief summary of some of
the most commonly asked questions about
AIDS. This article is my "a,ttempt -at
letting' people know that there is an
important day pending. I ,sincerely hope
some of you will take your Saturday off
and help those in need.

'can

"

-

,.-.',

Doug Smith plans to Dresenl a seriP.t

,INTERNATIONAL CITlZEN,MOBILiZATION
.,-,+ "'1 0*':anti":nuclear testing activists from around the world.
- GIZE, PRO~~--------jf--l

David Lynch's

BEAR WITNESS PROTEST

JANUARY 4TH •
VEGAS,",
,Presentations, discussion groups, videos, literature, fundraising, topics,
" networking, health iDlpacts~ environmental degradation, direCt action. ,

JANUARY 5TH • NEVADA TEsT SITE
Nonviolent, empowering protest.
,Bear witness to the destructiveness of nuclear weapons testing.

'LAs

INDUSTRIAL
SYMPHONY NO.1

']
'-...

INTERNATIONAL (~ONFERENCE

IT IS:TIME TO -BRING YOUR VOICE & COMMITMENT TO
'THE DESERT TO'DEMAND AN END TO NUCLEAR-MADNESS
'TRANSPORTATION '· HQUSING
bicycles are available to economicallydisabled folks in the community, and
slideshows. It was firmly resolved that in
addition to bicycle advocacy and
peace/justice/environmental wor~, one of
the main aims of this group will be to
have FUN.
Our next , meeting will be on
Thursday, November 29 at 8 pm in the
Evergreen Bike Shop. New faces are
needed and will be warmly welcomed.
Hope to see you there!
(Want more info? Call 206-FLAT-

(206) 632-4326

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"""""......"
"

Page 4 Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

"

INTERNATIONAL STUDENT

GRAPHICS, RESUMES. DISSERI'ATIONS '

Nov. 29, 4pm
Lecture Hall 1

TRAINING
Friday, Nov. 30

, ,WRITE 'PRESIDENT,BUSH 'and DEMAND A COMPREHENSIVE TEST.BAN.

HOST AN

'

EDITING/REVISION, COMPOSiTION, 'RESEARCH.

NON~VIOLENCE

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Coo~

Point. J~l November 29, 1990

Page 5 '

--

....

j,/

News

,

Memorial to dr1lg and alcohol · dead
music and the gr<ien ribbon drive, is
designed to open eyes to the problem of
driving under the influence.
The Jurassic Group will be continuing
its efforts next week 10 help keep the
Evergreen community safe ' from the
hazards of holiday driving. The
Thanksgiving drive attracted a lot of
attention, and group members are
bolstered by its success.
Evergreen student Tersea Jaworski, a
well-known local jazz/blues artist, will

kick off this season's campaign at the
Jurassic Cafe on November 30. Beginning
this ,Friday there will be a $1 cover
charge for ,all performances.
Green ribbons, to show you're a
Greener who doesn't drink and drive, as

well as the Memorial Scroll and more
infolmation, will be available at the
Jurassic's table in the CAB next week.
Libya T. M. Taylor is a regular
contributor to the CPJ.

Evergreen swim tea.&..&.. .

defe'a ted, twice

,

-

"

Columns

N~yY ·destroys "giaJ.it Bremerton ·shrimp'
by.
' ,' N
I"" '

d ,

by Libya T. M. Taylor
"I can't read it without crying," says
Shary Smith, Evergreen Drug and
, Alcohol prevention cooridinator and
health counselor, when ask~ about the
Jurassic Group's Memorial Scroll.
The permanent, ever-growing scroll,
on which students can eulogize loved
ones who died from drug or -alcohol use,
is only one facet of the group's
Dinosaurs Against Druf!.k , Driving
campaign. The scroll, in addition to live

,

'

)
I

I'
I

by ChrIS Bader
' ,
'
,
, Recendy) have been asked '
~ 1I E 12 .:, '
several people if the stories I wri~ are
' \) \ " " '
true. Some , believe that I am making
,
them up as I go along.
I cannot- teU you-that the stOries are
" true. " I don't know if UFOs are re,ally
visiting us, or if ghosts, Bigfoot and the
Loch Ness Monster exisL What lean tell .Naturally, there is the ~sibility that the
you is that the experiences I write about ' witnesses involved ' are deluded, or are
have been.reported by real people.
lying, but I am not here to judge people.
Most stories I f:.ind through . personal
I am here ,to present their stories.
contacts, others from old newspapers, but
' And here's a dOozy .... '
all are purportedly real accounts.
, Virginia Staples recently left a phone

.
I nte ~new. Woman kills
h er b
d rosemary
eI
ove

- ,
,'

message for · a Maryland par.in~rmal
~her ~ed Mark Chomnsky·,
tel~g .o.f a. bIZarre encounter' she had
while' hvmg m Breme~n, Washington. (I
have ~ unable to lOcated Mrs. Staples
an~ will have to rely on Chorviosky's
artIcle.)
It was 1948 when Mrs. Staples had
just moved into an apartment house near
the water in Bremerton. The complex had
a gigantic basement which housed its
washtub an~thclothesline. Its walls were
covered W1
huge holes, and the
apartment manager told her that it was
rumored that they were a "passage to the
water."
One day, Mrs. Staples was doing her
laundry when she felt something watching
her. She turned around and froze at the

"
sight of the crea~ standing before her.
It was taller than her five feet with a
"bright orange colored body and -little
spidery thin legs." On its head were large
antenna that "kept moving back in and
ouL"
,
She ran from the basement in terror
arid moved to Seattle.
In Seatt1e she went ~ the aquarium
to look for something like what she had
seen. She decided that the only thing that
closeywas, "this little tiny shrimp."
, ears later, Mrs. Staples gathered the
nerve to visit her old apartment house,
but the Navy had tom it down.
.
Could they have destroyed the GUlIlt
Shrimp of Bremetton?
. Chris Bader adtlpted t,his ariic1efrom
ISSue 6 of Strange Magazme.

by Ruth Frobe
.I. V.I.

Willamette University and Simon
Fraser University handed the Evergreen
men's and women's swim teams double
,......."'H ,.'....... .
losses in the Geoducks' second home
Interview by Ioga Muscio
true.
I: What was the flISt thing you thought I: What foreign city would you like to
meet of the season on November 16. The
about today?
see.
meel, a double dual contest, resulted in
the Evergreen women losing to Simon
C: Usually, the flISt thing I think about C: Rome.
Fraser 142 to 23 and losing to Willamette
is: What time is it? I knew I had to be I: If you were to believe you had a past
161 to 30. The Geoduck men were
at Evergreen at 10 o'clock. Usually, I life, who or what do you think you
downed 154 10 36 by Simon Fraser and
don't have appointments on Thursday, but were?
170 10 30 by Willamelte. Simon Fraser
today I knew I did.
C: You know, I was discussing this with
recorded two wins on the evening as
I: What made you decide on being an a friend and everyone always says they
their women's team outswam Willamette
attorney.
were a princess or and emperor or
C· I had a fri 'd
E
d h
by Laurie Hanaw and Eric Larsen
lemperalures and increase in ram' fall.
· men outswam the
126 to 94 and therr
.
en at vergreen an
e something. So, I suspect I was someone
Bearcats 139 10 66. Aldo Melchiori, the
encouraged me to go to a law school at who was rowing the boaL I was probably
The Thanksgiving holiday was
The pine siskins are back! The pine
coach of the GeodU(~ks, l>ointed out that
the end of my second year.
not the princess or the emperor or anyone
marked most prominently by the high siskins are back! The return of this
Simon Fraser has become and NAIA
I: So, you went to Evergreen?
rich or famous. I was probably one of
winds and abundant rainfall which species, one of winte(s true indicalors,
Scroll
memorializing loved ones who have died from alcohol
pOwerhouse
program
and
probably
has
C:
Yes.
the
masses.
stripped
trees , of their leaves ' while was documented at Nisqually National
and drug abuse. photo by Leslyn Lee
the top teams in the NAJA this season.
I: What do you think about Elvis?
I: Tell me about your houseplants.
flooding areas not normally exposed to Wildlife Refuge in the afternoon of
In spite of the lopsided scores and
C: EILL-VISS? I don't think much about C: They're just hanging in there. They're
water. While travelling this weekend you November 25. Late in comparison to last
Lough matchups, the Geoducks are seeing ,
Elvis. I don't think he's alive, contrary to not thriving. I've killed more rosemary
~aYthhalakve nOJiced the mallards swimming year, this species' return was marked by
than most people have eaten in their
m e
e lormed over the intersection a flock of 130 birds working the catkins
improvement and are setting their sights
popular opinion.
I: What's your favorite alcoholic drink?
lives. I love rosemary but f J'ust can't
~f ~ooardper TPh° int Road and Black Lake of a broad red alder.
on the Pacific Lutheran University
Invitational Meet, December 7 and 8 in
C: Irish coffee.
grow it.
0 e~
.
e turbulenl weather pattern
Recent sightings from the westside
(Marianne Bailey; French Culture)
Tacoma. Melchiori is looking for Nancy Gleason, member of the
I: What worries you?
I: Tell me something your grandmother
establIshed a fmn foothold marking the include three swans flying north over
Compiled by Nancy Koppelman
6:30 pm in LH5: Musical Presentation-improved times from the team as a whole
' ,
C: Hmmm ... dying' young. Getu·ng behm·d
beginning of the winter season.
northwest Olympia; a rather soggy dead
Monday
women's SWim team. photo by
wore
Usually w e ·
,
Test
Ii
(Ch
ar e
e;
and specifically from Brad Carlson in the Claire Littlewood
in my work.
C: Ugly shoes. My grandmother had
asSOCiate autumn s opossum on Division; and a merlin as
1-3 pm in LH3: Film--"The Seagull" (pat Verdi's "Don Carlo"
Krafcik; Russia/USSR)
Music Drama)
100 yard breaststroke, and Craig Erickson
I: Tell me the lyrics of a song.
those high top shoes. She didn't wear
pass~g to ~inter with the dormancy of well as a female sharp-shinned hawk
Tuesday
Open Door is a series of program
in the 1650 freestyle. Melchiori feels both
C: "Teach your children well ... "
pants 'til she was 75. She's still alive.
organIsms. any breeding birds move 10 ti;equenting the vicinity of Conger and
9-11 am in LHI: Student Presentations activities open to inlerestedpersons. When
of these swimmers are capable of
I: Who says that?
She's 92.
warmer climates while some mammals Thomas. On campus, a western red(Program
Members;
Environment, attending events. respect the host program
reaching
the
NAIA ' National
C: Crosby, Stills, Nash imd Young.
I: What would you like to be dol'ng n.ght
prepartsed~or afhibernaodtion .. Several kinds of backed salamander was found and a
Regions and Governance)
by remaining for the full period.
.
Championships in March, and both could I: Do. you have children?
now?
m~ec
Ie ter pr ucmg the eggs that pileated woodpecker observed, both
9-11 ~ in L1612: Films--"Brazilian
To include winter program events In meet the time qualifications for nationals - - ,
C: Yes, I do: a two and a half year-old C: Taking a nap. Having my hair done.
Wl~ hatch the next spring, and many behind the Communications building.
---Rainforest"-and-nRedwood-Summe~ete---lhe-Open-Doo/:....ColumJ4-.COl1tacL..Nan:~J--kt-t:he-PhU meet;;-.- -- - - - - --IJ---..::nt:; ~~~iJ!~~~!\~.~r.......-.---------:S(Jn...and..a-l4...y.eat-old-stePson.
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........-'ea~sts~i!YdS<.
e...."Ow.oman...r.eports....d.iffi.culty.--Bohmer and Larry Mosqueda; Political Koppelman in the Sludent Affairs office
Ruth Frobe is the information director
I: Are you nervous in a courtroom full of r:u~~~·~~
:ifort. omeffimg that enter a "metabOlIC sleep."
in ,-:nte~in~ her dwelling due to a large
Economy and Social Change)
(x6296).
at the CRC.
THE RAINER
people?
I . Does your son watch Ser,"'Me Street?
d In contrast to this general pattern of Spl r w lC has taken up residency in
'....
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Mo"rn~
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ormancy, ,winter rains initiate the
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C: No. I am nervous before, but not C: No-we don't get channel 9. He knows f"
f
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9-11 am in CAB 108: Lecture--"EXl e
'd R tied
LISTEN WE STILL SELL
h I' th
rwung 0 numerous species ,of funDi. A
It
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and Film "Fort Apac en Davl
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who all the characters are but he doesn't mushroom is the water-rich fruit ~f a
ethggs·t
ap~d hat e mstallation of
Cullures in Collision)
'
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: Ie me something triumphant.
watch it.
f
e s orm wm ow as presented a moral
3:30-6:00 pm in LH3: Film--"A
C: Having a baby was a triumphant I: Who's your favorite Sesame Street
ungus which itself is not normally
dilemma resulting in higher heating bills.
Midsummer Night's Dream" (Nancy
~
moment in my life. I'm embarrassed to character?
visible lo the naked eye. Although often
We vow to keep you posted on late
,
th A
f
th'
.
mistaken as plants, there are no
b eaki d I
Taylor; Shakespeare and
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,
317 E. 4th AVE., OLYMPIA
say at cause It's such a cliche. But it's C: Cookie Monster.
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similarities excepl that fungt' have rigid
Ebopments.
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N'kJd'
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0 DLY PRESENTS
I·. How come?
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"Dr" R· 1.- dsen, ea
S ,u:r. ona.
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Wednesday
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C: I love cookies and so 'does he.
.
IC,IU" on,
teve. an ~ omas.
10-11:45 am in LH1: Films--"Brazilian
TAPES. CD'S
NORTHW ST
GEND
"decomposers." Old stumps, dead animals,
Report your natural history observations!
Rainforest" and "Redwood Summer"
& RECORDS
The above interview was with and other organic matter provide the preSubmissions and short essays are
(Michael Drohan and Ron Sakolsky;
'h ' R&B
Christina Meserve . -on,e of the two new assembled nutrients that fungi need to
encouraged and can be dropped off at the
WE BUY 'EM
AND THE BLUE NOTES
~ eyre
)
members of the board of trustees.
survive. The seasonal abundance of
CPJ oiffice.
Political
Economy and Social Change)
WE SELL 'EM
FRIDAY
Thursday
mushrooms is a result of the lower
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AND CELTlC-FUSION WORLD MUSIC BY
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Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

943-8404

Page 7

.:

Response

Forum
-

.

Budget .priorities should be revised'
business community .
by Irene Mark Buitenkant
If in the "budget exercise" in which
The conventional wisdom in the
the school population is decreased by 500
business world is a consensus that labor
and the teachers
redu'c ed by 28 and
costs must be reduced~ The Anny is
the staff reduc~ by 41, would the ,fIring ' soldiers,
not
cutting ' back
opposite take place? When the population
appreciably on capital expenditures. In
was increased by 500, were the teacher
New York #684,. a super highway was
and staf.f ' numbers enlarged in the , built but there was no money for clearing
inverted . manner? I hardly thi~ so since
snow off all the lanes, and road signs
I am in a language course of 60 students
were sometimes riot visible because
with two professional teachers, one paravegetation wasn't tfimmed around them.
professional and ali intern. I will say
These are a few ' examples of capital
nothing abOut the lack of space badly
expenditures: yes; labor: no.
solved by holding the class in an open
Why? I think it is because business
noisy lounge area.
swells the coffers of campaigns, and
I doubt _whether Dr. Olarider or. Mr.
elected officials do the bidding of their
Puree looked to educators like John
benefactors " in exchange for capital
Hutchens or James Conaht as role models ' contacts.
of college presidents. Their role models
For the last decade or so big business
and mentors seem to .come from the
was doing ' so well ' with its borrowed

are

'.

-

FMLN' guilty of ·

-

'lOper(.\tion ~sert Shielcr" ~xpJQ;necl:

violent acts" ,too

r-------------~--~~_r~

This is to respOnd to the articles by
Jason Summers, William Kramer, and
Scot Wheat ·(November 15 CP1).
I agr:ee with you that the government
curiently in power in EI Salvador is
morally corrupt, has murdered thousands
upon thousands of innocent people, and
should bum in the hottest rings of hell.
------------~------I agree with you in saying they should be
taken ,out .of power and that someone
responsible to humanity should replace
them.
But I don't agree with you when it
comes to being blindly supportive of the
Salvadorian government's opposition. And
I take offense at your hypocritical way of
doing so. You objected to the November
- 8 CPJ cartoon regarding the FMLN as
"perpetuating disinfonnation," then turn
Irene Mark Buitenkant submits
DESERT·
around and commit the same crime!
regularly to the CPJ.
I will agree with you that the FMLN
,seems to be the only current hope for the FMLN of brutality and terrorism. Do you
common people of El Salvador. I am not want the members of our campus
impressed with the solid support the community to know about Jose Angel
FMLN has among the Salvadoran people, Lemus Sanchez, a former soldier who the
radicals perpetuate this oppression in
I urge you to seriously question
and respectful of their hopes in the FMLN allegedly kidnapped from his
organization. But is the FMLN really the fields and tortured to death? And what
claiming that Gay, Bisexual, and Lesbian yours and others heterosexist stereotypes.
liberation is not vital nor an important Gays, bisexuals, and lesbians were not
great savior you are making it out to be? about Sanchez's'family, who the FMLN
revolutionary concern.
born unnatural, emotionally deformed,
You've done your best to tell our has warned would be killed if they didn't
Social change, revolutionary theories, and hormonally unbalanced (who isn't?);
campus how the FMLN has been stop denouncing his ,murder? Hmmm,
and action are valid, necessary and we are not scared of the opposite sex; we
popularly misunderstood. But nowhere sounds like brutality and terrorism to me,
have you told us how the FMLN good sirs.
respectable ideals and goals. Yet, it is an are ' not incorrigible man or woman
operates, what its stated goals or beliefs
And what about 14-year-old Jose
absolute must to confront our own haters; we did not necessarily have strong
socially constructed and internalized mothers and weak fathers; there are many
are, or what its plans for the future are Aleman Ardon, who was reportedly
schisms.
examples to be found in this sordid mess.
once the Salvadoran government is
"disappeared" by the FMLN; his
Wherever you go, there are closeted
disposed. These should speak just as companion was shot at and had a grenade '
Oppression is not only a social
loudly on behalf of the FMLN as protests thrown after him when he managed to
condition. Murray Bookchin states in gay people who are wondering hqw safe
Post-Scarcity Anarchism, "It is also a it is for them. Provide safety and
of grossly unfair propaganda, shouldn't escape his captors. The whereabouts of
state of consciousness, a sensibility acceptance.
'
they?
Jose Aleman Ardon, and the reason for
Challenge heterosexism. Do not
Unfortunately, the only clear message
his disappearance, remain a mystery.
toward . phenomena at every ·Ievel of
I've ever heard regarding the FMLN is
Other reports I've read by propersonal and social experience." If the leave it up to us. Challenge anti-gay
revolutionary process does not take place statements.
its military struggle. I've attended FMLN FMLN writers drop more hints of human
Challenge your own homophobia.
speaking tours, and interviewed FMLN rights abuses that horrify me. Forced
within the mind as well within the soul,
Resist the impulse to make sure
members and supporters. But I've never recruitment into the FMLN army? The
social change will reach a state of
atrophy and decay. Any revolution that others know that you are not gay.
heard the organization's goals and plans FMLN's demands that mayors of towns
Explore your own homosexuality.
for the future stated in a way that wasn't in areas of guerrilla strength resign or
fails to acknowledge these personal
dilemmas
is
a
counter-revolution.
The goal of any social change
confused and/or didn't conflict with a
face execution? Where is the FMLN's
Confronting our own internal dynamics of movement today must be in the liberation
previous statement in order to please goodwill to the Salvadoran people evident
oppression--and--euF--(}wn-bomesexualily-of-daily-life,by-ehallengiflg-the-almos!~t- - - - - - - -current- audienee-e-xpeeUltieIHSo.- - - - -ln-such-actions?
can be diffIcult, trying, but all the same invisible and undetectable racist, sexist,
To serve your own purposes, you
These are only a few lives--next to
and heterosexist anxieties within our
quote
the
most recent Amnesty nothing compared to the 74,000 plus
rewarding and liberating.
International report on human rights murdered by those the FMLN opposes;
I can only implore others to delve psyche as within our society.
Jim Allbaugh thinks that everyone
abuses in EI Salvador. I agree that the indeed, the FMLN are angels compared
into the unconscious and confront racist
and . sexist assumptions. Because I am who wants to work in a counter-cultural
amount of material on FMLN abuses is to the atrocities committed by the
small--one page out of a 23-page report
Salvadoran government. But anyone who
white, male, and gay, I can only speak, center should definitely read "Homeless
with any sense of assurance, on the issue reality blocks ideology," every harsh and
--but I believe that a human rights abuse "disappears" children, terrorizes grieving
of gayness and heterosexism.
truthful word of it (page 9),
is a human rights abuse, regardless of its families, and commits preplanned murders
perpetrator.
is giving their halos a very ugly tarnish.
In making the FMLN sound like P.S. And shame on you boys for fmgersaints, you forget to mention Amnesty's pointing in regards to sexism. Paul
concerns "at the number of reports it has Slusher's pro-FMLN article in ' the
received of executions by the FMLN, October 25 CPJ is just as guilty, and I
simplistically say it condemns any kind given struggle before making judgements
Sometimes preceded by abductions." Yes, didn't hear your objections! Let's call the
of violence," and spoke of the "legitimate about armed resistance.
so the men executed were suspected kettle black, shall we?
Scot Wheat is co-coordinator of the
right of defense.'
informers or off-duty or retired soldiers. Whitney Ware
In bringing up the struggle for Evergreen Political Information Center.
But I guess I'm just too damned
justice in EI Salvadot, we are not William Kramer is on his way to
conservative in thinking that the murder
claiming that positive social change can Hungary; we wish him well.
of an unarmed man is still murder.
only be achieved through violence (the
The quotes you don't mention from
OC S 1
struggle ill EI Salvador involves many
the Amnesty International report would
Jim Allbaugh's article (November 15
different strategies and tactics, from the
CP1) I must respond to.
justify Paul Henry's cartoon accusing the
non violent popular organizations to the
VOLUNTEER
advertisements in the first printing only. Any
armed resistance of the FMLN). Such a
Entenainmeint Production: Rachel Nesse
subsequent printing of this mistake are the
view would be just as ahistorical and
Blotter Compilation: Rebecca Randall
sole responsibility of the acivenising customer.
rigid as the view that pOsitive social
Poetry Editor: Mike Mooney
change can only occur through nonNews Briefs Compilation: Linda Gwilym
The User's Guide
violent means.
EDITORIAL-866-6000 x6213
The Cooper Point Journal exists to
Editor: Tedd Kelleher
Rather, we are attempting to reveal
facilitate communication of events, ideas.
Managing Editor: Scott A. Richardson
movements, and incidents affecting The
the nonsense behind advocating nonEntertaimnent Editor: Andrew Hamlin
Evergreen State College and surrO\Ulding
violence asa taCtic by citing Ghandi or
Production Manager: Giselle Weyte
communities. To portray accurately our
the civil rights movement and then asking
Photo Editor: Leslyn Lee
conununity, the paper_ -itrives to publish
why people struggling for change in a
Typist: Linda Gwilym
material from anyone willing to work with
completely different context, such as El
BUSINESS--866-6000 x605,!1
us.
Salvador, can't aspire to this.
The
Business Manager: Edward Martin ill
Submission deadUne Is Monday noon.
problem is that those who have power in
Assistant Business Manager: Katrina Barr
We will try to publish material submitted the
Advertising Manager: Chris Carson
El Salvador ' (and many other countries)
following Thursday. However, space and
Ad Layout: Paul Henry, Deborah Roberts, editing conStraints may delay publication.
don't have morals regarding people by Jere~y ~iller
Wars over money are better than
Juli~ Revel
advocating change or even reform.
Editing will attempt to clarify material.
wars
of
ideology
because
the
noble
Jolm Dempsey
Distribution:
not change its meaning. If possible we will
National security state violence is the
ADVISER
principles which once seemed worth
consult the writer about substantive changes.
order of the day and the key to
DilJU\e Conrad
dying
for
inevitably
decay
into
impotent,
Editing will also modify submissions to fit
maintaining control.
malignant,
paltry
operations,
betraying
within the parameters of the Cooper Point
Under these conditions, the struggle
Advertising
Journal style guide. The style guide is
and
abandoning
their
former
advocates
for peace through justice must include
For information, rates, or to place display available at the CPJ office.
and exposing the empty drivel of their
armed self dc!rense or proponents will be
and classified IKivC!Jti&ements, contact 866Bveiyone ,is invited to attend . CPI
composure. In wars of greed, they just
6000 x60S4. Deadlines are ·the Monday prior weekly meeting., Friday at 12:30 in CAB306.
systematically IlJlI1ihiI8ted by the state.
lose the money.
to each Thursday'. print.
,
With this in mind, we are suggesting
If you have any questiona, pleue drop
Jeremy Miller wtns the awardfor the
The CPS is responsible for ~titution to by Lt'bruy 2510 or call 866-6000 x6213.
that people pay auention to the specific
most succinct forum piece this year.
our advenilina customen for rniItIkeI in their
material and institutional conditions in a
money and its unethical ,shenanigans (e.g.
S&Ls and ' unwarranted and leveraged
expansions, buyouts, etc.) that nearly all
businesses got on that same bandwagon.
I understand that it 'is diffIcult for people
to survive against the tide, but let us not
admire the aping CEOs. for their acumen
just because they look prosperous. Why
does an old ' institution like Frederick and
Nelson lose its credit rating? And why
does our school have to be under the
thlJmb of an uncreative, impotent, or
unwilling administration?
The legislature itself had a surplus
last" year and this year it expects to be
under-funded. What kind of intelligence'
is under that dome?
The state of Washington does not
seem to appreciate the kind of education
going on here. They seem to think higher

educational institutions should be a kind
of higher trade school. Why doesn't
someone try to interest a truly creative
entity to make this a private school?
Japan, for instance, or an hei,r of John
Paul Getty. I am thinking of a secure
entity who appreciates culture and the
minds who are responsible for creating it.
I think people of that ilk understand the
process that , Carnegie Commission (?)
applauded and yet regretted how remiss
most universities were in teaching
Humanities.
P.S. Until we can find a creative
benefactor, how about saving money by
immediately stopping all construction and
purchases of new equipment. Save our
student-teacher ratio instead!

, - -, ", " . ' , . r1lr,.

-_-_- _-_-_ - _-_-_W

THE

Heterosexist radicals are oppressors

by Jim AllbilUgb
radicals. Heterosexism is the socialization
of all people to fear their own ~d each ,
As of late, there has been a powerful
resurgence of activism and pride among , other's
homosexuality,
and
the
most all gays, bisexuals, and lesbians.
reinforcement of traditional dominant
male/female, social/sexual relationships.
Cultural cohesion, gay spirit, and mutual
cooperation, as well as ideological _,
Issues of race, class, and gender
divisions, can be seen and felt among oppression are discussed openly ' and
gays, bisexuals, and lesbians throughout without remorse ' among leftists. Even
the United States. These liberating these topics tend to deteriorate into talks
passions began in the streets and they are bold the "oppressed" and not with the
Heterosexism
has
been
beginning to permeate and transform oppressed.
many cultural realms and institutions. trivialized, marginalized, and not deemed
Even our own little hideaway in the worthy of serious discussion.
woodS, Evergreen, has been touched in
It is disturbing, angering, and
many ways: the creation of Olympia saddening to see a group of hypocritical
. . Queer Nation and the culmination of Gay "radical" activists demanding an end to
and Lesbian studies for winter and spring this or that oppression and then, oh so '
subtly, mentally stab gays, bisexuals, and
quarter are only a few examples.
Gay, bisexual, and lesbian activism is lesbians with their playful remarks and
growing, evolving, and becoming all the (unintentional?) actions. Those who know
while wiser. Gay, bisexual, and lesbian me may now perhaps understand my
activism has been a most influential and recent eschewing political behavior.
powerful participant in the struggle to
Gay, bisexual, and lesbian liberation
_ _ _ bcing-abouWl-desirable,.pr.ogressiv.e-an,~d_iL;>s-'Jofte~times trivialized in theory and in
practice. Lack of 'recognition on the part
broadly based social change movement
There is, however, a disparity; an of contemporary' American culture and
attitude of condensation on the part of ,so-called revolutionary groupings adds
most loosely associated "radical" activists salt to an already festering, but , h~aIing,
towards gays, bisexuals, and lesbians. wound.
'
Heterosexism
is
still
rearing
its
Instead of recognizing that we are
grotesquely ignorant head upon the voicing an awareness of the oppression
shoulders of self-proclaimed ' heterosexual that we live with all of the time, many

Advocating non-violent
by Scot Wbeat and William Kramer
The
fundamental
aspiration of
pacifism, a world order base9 on peace,
respect, and cooperation, IS -in adffiirable
goal we should all aspire to. A glance at
the present reveals that we are far from
reaching such a goal: violence is used
around the globe to perpetuate social
inequalities that produce massive poverty
and starvation. Thus, the question is:
How do we get from here to there?
Many self-avowed pacifists claim that
non-violent tactics are the sole means by
which to achieve true social justice. This
results in the universal condemnation of
violence on "principled" grounds, even
when it is used in self defense against
brutal state repression.
Rather than resorting to violence, the
argument goes, those suffering from state
repression should illustrate their "moral
superiority" through utilizing non-violent
tactics. Historical examples are then
provided to show the. success of such
efforts. However, to assume that absolute
tactical non-violence will work in every
and
context
is ahistorical,
rigid,
contradictory .
It would be nice if, without
exception, "immoral" states would feign
to use violence when threatened with
meaningful social change. This implies,
however, that the "immoral" state
possesses the same "moral superiority"
that non-violent tacticians claim for
themselves (sense a contradiction?).

Unfortunately,
there are
many
examples which reveal the absurdity of
such beliefs. For instance, the Salvadoran
government decided long ago how nonviolent opposition ' would be deaJt with-an all-out war against the domestic '
population resulting in 74,000 dead
civilians.
Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero
described in 1979 the tactics of the
Salvadoran government in his last
pastorru letter:

The great numbers of peasants,
workers, and slum dwellers, and so forth.
who have organized themselves to defend
their rights and promote legitimate
structural changes, are simply judged to
be "terrorists" and "subversives" and so
are arrested, tortured, made 10 disappear,
or are murdered, with no law or judicial
institution to protect }hem or to give them
a chance to defend themselves and prove
their innocence. Faced with these uneven
and Unjust odds, they have often felt
forced 10 defend themselves, even with
violence, and again they have encountered '
the state's arbitrary violence.
Few would argue (except, perhaps,
the Salvadoran military) that Romero was
a "terrorist," or' even a person who
glorified viQI~nce. In fact, many of his
speeches arid writings advocated nonviolence and the peaceful resolution of
conflicts. However, given the context of
ruthless state violence in his country,
Romero realized that "the church cannot

t~ctics

nonsense

ale
Homeless re Ity
bl k · d eoI ogy

This week's final
forum submission
is two sentences
which tell of the
difference
between war ,f or
money· and"-war
for ideology

.

"

/'

/

,

..

/

somehow.
, . I could have been anyone. I could
have been Carrie, a single mother with
no other family. I could have been Larry,
a construction worker who suffered a
bout of pneumonia and was frred from
his non-union job because he couldn't
work, I could have been Jo, whose
lesbian spouse's daughter has leukemia,
requiring expensive (and uninsured)
medical treatment. Jo is an employee at
Boeing whose apartment went condo;
they had to move.
Please, let us not forget that these
"homeless" and/or "street youth" are not
a fashionable addition to a sociallyconscious rap circle, and the streets are
not just a ' place where interesting
unemployed people display their pink hair
and black .Ieather. This issue is real, it's
ugly, it's shameful and it hurts.
Do you still want to talk about it?
Lynne Swackhammer

'Disempowerment
b d
y emocracy

You want to rap with homeless
people? You want to socialize with
"street youth"? Maybe I can help you
So
Tedd
Kelleher
of
the
Sanctimonious Seepage feels he has the
there. I'm and average, middle-class
woman from an average, middle-class
right to call non-voters "apathetic?" Even
"pathetic?" He should talk.
family who was a homeless, indigent
street urchin last year.
Face it, fella, elections do nothing
Now, I was not a victim of mental
but disempower the very "masses" they
supposedly liberate. By turning every
illness, nor domestic violence; some of
"issue" into a matter of Lowest-Commonthe people I met at the shelter on 1st
Denominator Mob Rule, the much-touted
Street were, though. I was not a
"democratic system" itself is responsible
drug/alcohol dependent; I was not selffor the "commercialism" that has crept
destructive or unwilling to work for a
into itself.
living and I did not "choose to be
Nowadays there are only two kinds
homeless," Ronnie. So how di,d it
happen?
of people who still talk about "voterI was evicted from my apartment in
apathy": politicians, and their loyal
Seattle because the complex was sold,
opposition, mass media journalists. It is
unclear from his article which position
and my name was ,not on the lease. A
Mr. Kelleher is aspiring to. Maybe he's
roommate had originally rented it and
had long since moved out; I took over
just a "concerned citizen," like Tipper
Gore.
the rent payments and all went smoothly
According to him, our opinion on
until the new owner came on the scene.
He wanted credit reports on his
"many ballot items is inconsequential,
especially when it comes to the Federal
tenants, and I had no credit. He broke
Government." But nearly all of the "local
into my apartment while I was sleeping,
issues" he wants us to waste our time
woke me up and told me to get the hell
Qul When I called the police (,-"wC"o~u1=-cdn
~'t,----;-:
vO,,-,t~
I' n;<:g,-:o
"-,n"--",
are
~c",o"",m'-'Jp""l"",
ete
~
IY,-=
in",c,,,,on,..seq""1u~e~n!!:ti~a1~,_ __
by their very nature, since the authority
you?) I was told he was completely
of the feds supersedes that of the local
within his rights to evict me immediately,
without notice.
'
government. Those which are not, are
I rented a motel room, because there
stolen from the community due to the
fact that by turning an "issue" into a
was nothing else to do, at the rate of
$875 a month, and worked at two jobs
"bill" or a "law," one passes the buck to
cops and lawyers rather than taking real
seven days a week to pay for it There
action on the issue oneself. Of course, as
were rats. It was a not-so-nice section of
the city and there were arrests made in
long as we vote for the right
"representative," we don't need any
the motel rooms and halls daily. Sirens at
all hours.
political opinion at all, it's all in their
hands now. Just stay home and watch
As my luck was going last year, I
"The Simpsons."
broke my fOOL At the poorer end of the
service-industry employment scale, iliat
So we're apathetic for not voting?
What do you call actively using your
means no more job, too bad for you the
voice to support a system that is,
rent is due. My parents are subsisting on
Social Insecurity; I don't want to burden
destroying the individual in every was
possible, and has outlawed every effective
them. Besides, they live' 100 miles from
way for that individual to express anger
Seattle. I didn't have bus fare . across
at hislher suppression? We should "stop
town, let alone 100 miles down the
highway. '
whining"? Hey buddy, by voting, you
agreed to abide by the outcome of the
I learned what it was like to be
election. In short, you helped them make
evicted from a restaurant because I
your bed, now go lie in it You can't
overstayed my cup of coffee. I know
how it feels to see a DSHS worker sneer
vote against the system, only for one or
in distaste because I don't have an
the other aspect of it.
In fact, the only vote ' that ~eaIly
address. l~-Iow it feels to have policemen
follow you down the street and make counts any more is a "wasted" one, a
rude comments and assumptions. The vote for not voting, as it were. Majority
rules, eh? Well, the majority has been
"scumbag treatment," I've heard it called.
ruling that there should be no electoral
It didn't take long until I believed I was
system for longer than I've been alivea scumbag. There's fear, a lot of fear;
by not voting, ' or' a vote for the
and for good reason. A good number of
government, a vote not cast is a vote for
the people at the shelter I wound up at
were seriously mentally ill. Many more . freedom.
of the disturbed are sleeping on -the
I don!t know about other students on
street There is not Thorazine here, no
campus, but I'm not "waiting for the
revolution," I'm living it, the first step is
shrinks, and all my roommates are free
abstaining from your government's
to buy guns. You know?
The homeless learn very quickly
attempts to recuperate you into itself.
who their friends are. Most of them,
J leave you with the words of Bob
Black, "You want 'Anarchy Now'? I
however well-chosen at the time of
wis~ I had your patience!"
choosing, will disown you. It's I)ot that
they're saying, "Ooh, icky, a degeneratel"
~ike Grutcblield
when they look at you. It's more, I
imagine, that you need so much HELP
it is embarrassing to be around you.
-You're handicapped; they feel guilty,

'

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

Cooper Point Joumal November 29, 1990
_i

Page 9

Arts & Entertainment
A ·sampling of A Stranger's House
by Robert M Keefe
A STRANGER'S HOUSE,BY BRET LOTI
WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS, 1990 .
256 PAqES, $7.95 PAPER
A house. A home. Though these
words have a synonymous quality to
them,
popular
thinking connotates
separate defmitions: the fITst being a
physical building, the second an
emotional sense of belonging.
Claire Templeton, nee Shaw, the
protagonist of A Stranger's House, Bret
Lou's second novel, is seeking a home;
not the large three-quarter Cape she and
her husband will move into, but a
reconciliation of her own past and future
tills house will be the catalyst for.

~~ ... not a hick
~~vernacular

but

~~ instead .a word
e..

~~ !choice
~~

that is

contemporruy...

If this reconciliation seems a bit
much for a single object to meet--even
one as large and as full of meaning as a
home--not to worry, Bret Lott has given
the house a past of its own: Martin and
Grady . two strangers living in the house
Claire just bought.
Grady, a teenager, is the grandson of
the man selling the house. He works with
Martin, who is eccentric but brilliant in
construction, at a local Friendly' s
restaurant. Though they can no longer
live in the house because Claire has just

Book- Review

many people imagine is glamorous ~
full of interesting activities. And so
writing is for me my own work, my job,
what I do. And though it is work, I still
have a blast every time I sit down at my
desk, imagining the lives of other people
aqd putting them down on paper."
His prose is straightforward, parallel
to his style. There is a definite · "small
town in New England" feel to his
writing--not Ii hick vernacular, but instead
a word choice that is contemporary, but
with a sense of history and never

Morrissey, definitely a single man. , sings


people have come to expect from the and Morrissey's melodramatic loneliness
man. It is so well written and produced just seems a little too comfortable. The
you forget it's about a child that is so syrupy "Ouija Board, Ouija Board" comes
. ugly nobody wants it. The song also across like Morrissey's answer to Paul
.
featUres a bongo beat and a flute solo at McCartney's "Silly Love Son·gs".
However, when Morrissey gets his
the break; these are a welcof!1e departure
from Morrissey's usual backing fare. · chemistry right on a ballad, like on "Yes,
which rarely strays from the same jangly. I Am Blind" and "He Knows I'd Love
overdubbed guitar agenda that Johnny To See Him." His voice moans like a
Marr set for The Smiths. "Interesting cello, swoons like a swan and few ballad'
Drug" is also a brilliant single. It writers anywhere can compare.
"Bona
Drag"
suffers
from
overflows with melodic guitar hooks and
should be included in anyone's Single inconsistency, but given the . patchwork
fashion in which it was made, that's
Writing 101 class.
Johnny
Marr's absence haunts expected. You're better off going out and
MQrrissey, who has always been a buying the "November Spawned a
wordsmith and not a music writer. His Monster" or "Interesting Drug" singles
songs are only as good as whoever he because they're what Morrissey is all
can find to write tunes for him. What's about: perfect short pieces with craft so
missing from "Bona Drag" are the angst- intricate they demand the attention of a
driven rockers like "The Queen is Dead," full album. But, if you're felling sorry for
"What She Said," and "Bigmouth Strikes yourself, buy "Bona Drag," buy some
Again," that Morrissey did with The Ben and Jerry's, turn the lights off, and
Smiths (and that Johnny Marr wrote the spin it because you can bet that at kast
music for), which made his loneliness one person on earth will be feeling worse
and despair rear up and seem more than you are. There is some consolation
desperate and convincing--even Roy in that.
Orbison came out with a rocker every
Mark Winford likesfire extinguishers.
now and then. On "Bona Drag" all the There was one for sale outside the CAB
songs are in the same general mid-tempo on Tuesdlly.

by Mark Winrord
MORRISSEY

ignorant of the natural beauty about him.
One feels when reading Bret Loll they
are rambling down a country road in
VermOnt top down, traveling past farms, .
with multicolored foliage present on the
hills. He is a writer who can evoke these _
~iroi1g images. . And his exploration of
everyday conflicts creates in his
characters (and his readers) a longing for
home.

past she keeps obscured--has a curiosity
in Martin and Grady's past and begins to
investigate it, all the while fixing her new
home and discovering · her own past.
Through these simple relationships and
each character's complex history, Bret
Robert M Keefe has no period after
Lou erects a powerful story of shattered
his middle initial.
hopes and a desire for belonging.
Bret Lotl, born October 8, 1958 in
Los Angeles, . is, besides a writer, an
English professor in Charleston, South - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . ,
Carolina. His career was varied before
settling in teaching and writing: he was a
reporter, a cook's trainer and even an RC
Cola salesman (the career he gave Rick
Wheeler, the protagonist of his first
novel, The Man WIw Owned Vermont).
His schooling was as eclectic: fITst he
was a forestry major, then a marine
. biology major, then he quit school (to
sell RC Cola), and then returned hoping
to teach high school; it was then a
teacher recommended he go for his
masters, which he fmally did.
Bret's style is neo-realist; his
conflicts evolve from day to day living:
trying to hold a job, family relationships,
people getting on each other' s nerves. In
an interview with Contemporary Autlwrs
he states: "All my writings, whether short
stories or novels, are about working
people--people who have to sort through
their personal lives and problems while
working to pay bills and put food in the
refrigerator. I think this comes from the
fact that my family is a working one (I
was the fITst person to go to college in
the Lott family in three generations). My
brothers and sister and wife and in-laws
and most frie~ds all work forty hours a
Scrooge (seated) and Marley (with chains). argue the ~xer shorts vs. hri'~fcl
week; that seems real to me--not a
thing one more time in Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol;- presented on
professor's life or ~ writer's life that so
stage by the Nebraska Theater Caravan at the Washington Center, November

noNo no no, you sing the C sharp!"

30. See calendar for details.
photo

them to work with her on the house (a
real fixer-upper). Martin and Grady's past
·and their relationship to one another is
obscured, there is more to it then they
are willing to admit Claire--whose own

Arts & Entert.a inment

"BONA DRAG" (LP)
SIRE/REPRISE . RECORDS

Whether you .love or hate; Morrissey
(and there is no middle ground) you have
to give him credit for at least two things.
Celibate, drug free, vegetarian and
, fascinated by James Dean and Oscar
Wilde, he brought a fresh new dimension
to the "hey dude, party hardy, sex god,
rock and roll star" thing. And his former
band The Smiths, and his · solo work at
times, also helped breathe some life and
photo by Jurgen Teller
integrity in the dying "siqgle as art Stiff neckl
form." The Smiths released 18 successful
singles in their native England in their "Picadally Palare" and also offers some B
four-year career and you have to admire sides that are often better than the
their disdain for videos: they only made singles--he saves some of his best songs
a handful. Morrissey has released eight for the flips ide.
Morrissey's melodramatic loneliness
singles in his three year career as a
and tragicomedy aside, "Bona Drag" has
soloist--unusual for a major label artist.
"Bona Drag" collects Morrissey's its moments. "November Spawned a
singles--conveniently at Christmas time Monster" is a perfect example of the
for America's record buying public--from - multilayered, melodic, well crafted,
1988's "Suedehead" ~ the present' s immaculately produced five minutes that

Support ,the underground, see these movies
by Edward Martin

m

If all the animation you ever thought
existed was Bugs Bunny, Mickey Mouse
and Speedy · Gonzales, then strap your
space helmet on tight and hang on to the
armrests because you have been missing
out on one of the most refreshing
entertainment experiences since hand
puppets and take-out pizza.
The 22nd International Tournee of
Animation,
the
oldest and
most
prestigious touring movie festival in the
world, starts this Friday (November 30)
at the Capital Mall Cinemas and promises
to be as much fun, excitement and
adventure
sealed pair of pants
ferrets. Be sure to

don't have them here and I think it
depends on what other movies are
showing.
The festival consists of 18 awardwinning animated shorts (average length
5 to 7 minutes) from around the . world
including such obscure countries as the
the
United States, the U.S.S.R.,
Netherlands, Canada, Yugoslavia, France,
West Germany and Japan. Total running
time is about an hour and a half.
The planned shorts 'are "Kakania"
(Karen Aqua - U.S.A.), "A Touch of
Deceit" (Michel Gagne - ·Canada), ''The
Cow" (Alexander Petrov - U.S.S.R.), "Cat
& Rat" (Jim Richardson - .U.S.A.), "Sand

Dance" (Richard Quade - U.S.A.),
"Pictures From Memory" (Nedjelko
Dragic - Yugoslavia), "A Very, Very
Long Time Ago" (Olive Jar Animation
Studio - U.S.A.), "Shadrach" (Nathanial
Hornblower, Chris Casady - U.S.A.),
"Vykrutasy" (Garri Bardin - U.S.S.R.),
Gisele Kerozene" (Jan Kounen - France),
"The Bedroom" (Maartin Koopman - The
Netherlands), "Balance" (Christoph and
,Wolfgang Lauenstein - West Germany),
"Train Gang" (paul Driessen - Canada,
The Netherlands), "Juke-Bar" (Martin
Barry/National Film Board - Canada),
"Animated Self-Portraits" (David Ehrlich
- U.S.A., Yugoslavia, Estonia U.S.S .R.,

Czechoslovakia, Japan),
"A Warm
Reception in L.A." (Vincent Cafarelli,
Candy Kugel - U.S.A.), "All My
Relations" (Joanna Priestley - U.S.A.) and
The Arnold Waltz (Craig Bartlett U.S.A.).
There is an intennision planned after
"Gisele Kerozene," so don't get up and
leave, thinking you've seen it all.
You've only seen half, so just get some
more popcorn or pop and get back quickquick.
Wouldn't it be great if life
worked like this all the time?

One of the slwrts is really a Beastie
Boys video, but Edward Martin III is not
going to tell you which one.

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The 4th Annual
Cooper Point Journal's

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*Entertainment
..:. '*
Guide
\. ~~_

~

. &

*

PUBLISHED DEC. 6th
.

SUBIIIT STORIES, POETRY, CARTOONS
AND ITEMS l'Oa SPECIAL HOLIDAY
CALENDAR TO SECTION EDITOR:

. Phone. 868-8000 X8213

SPECIAL ORDERS WELCOME

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COMPACT OlSCS &

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ANDREW JIAIIUlII
By Spm Thun. New, :19th
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Page 10 Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

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lP-i~~r:\o. J., ,

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ANNOUNCES

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WESTSIDE CENTER
DIVISION & HARRISON

Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

Page 11

L

Arts & Entertainment

Ian gives Happening Sidewalk poop
by laD Dickson
The local underground lo,ve rock
scene will be iIi full affect Thursday at
the Northshore Surf Club. Sophisticated
futurists, Beat Happening will play with
Some
Velvet
freaked-out . rockers
Sidewalk.
Beat Happening have been together
'they have released 3
for 7 years.
records, 4 singles. and have been the
featured
attraction
in
videos,
compilations, ttibute albums, action
l' talked with Calvin
figures, etc.
Johnson, who sings and plays drums for
the band.

guys ... Have you recorded with the new
,
line-up?
AI: Yea, we ~rded Ii bunch of songs
here in OLympia at Yo-Yo studios, with
Pat Maley and Calvin...we recorded about
7 songs,
Ian: So where do you see yourselves
going? Are you going to ,be a nationally
touring rocle act?
AI: Touring just doesn't seem that smart
to me. Gas prices are going up, you
know, and driving around all over the
country and burning-up all this gas
doesn't seem that cool...maybe we'll get
a car that runs on propane...or maybe
we'll take the ' ttain, get one of those
tickets where you can get off at every
, town.

Ian: How did this Surf Club thing start?
What's it all about?
CJ: Well there are the owners, Baurice
and Jeff, and I heard they were interested
in doing shows on Thursday night So I
gave them a call and they were looking
for · somebody, and I know a lot of
people in bands and stuff, I thought I
might be the person to do the job, know
what I mean?

How ~o you think underground
music has changed in the last five years?

Ian:

t

possible." For info call lolie at 754-1876.

29_----=T:.:...:.HU.:::..:.R=SD::;..::..A~Y
NEVADA lEST SITE PROJECT: Dave
Baker will give you .the dope, straight or
otherwise, in ~ture Hall 1 at 4 pm.

DOSSIER: "An evening of jazz with sax
and vocal lead with keyboards." Where
else but the Latona Pub,6423 Latona
Avenue N.E., Seattle. 9 pm. $1-2.
.

1

SA 'TUR·DAY

.!!!!!!~ _ _ _ _~~I"'\~~~=~~:..

BEAT ,HAPPENING- AND SOME
VELVET SIDEWALK: Olympia's most
famous and the next up-and-coming.
Swing. At the proverbial North Shore
Surf Club, 116 E. Avenue, Olympia, 8
pm. $5.
WASHINGTON
STATE
ARTS
COMMISSION: Meeting in Tacoma, the
Tacoma Inn, 8726 South Hosmer just off
184th St Two series of meetings, today
and tomorrow. Public encouraged to
attend. For info call , Mark Clemens at
753-3860.

BREMERTON ROCK SHOW:
Yep,
tonight at 8 pm, the American Legion
Hall Post 1 hosts the Treepeople, the
Stoopid Chemists (from Portland), and
Penis NY, the "special guests." All ages
welcome. $5.

PHILANDROS
A
CAPPELLA:
AI: I don't know about the rest of the
INTERNSHIPS:
ENVIRONMENTAL
Philandros, a cool unaccompanied vocal
Is the guy on the
from
or what? Decode your anSwer now. 50l1'le country, but in the Northwest, its really
Want an environmentally centered group, comes to the Evergreen Recital
cool right now because local 'poopie are
Velvet Sidewalk is Martin on bass, Don on drums, and AI on guitar.
internship? Don't miss this meeting. 3 to
Hall tonight at 7:30 pm. $8 general
photo by Jon Snyder
.
into local music.. Like when Nirvana
6 pm in the Library Lobby. Sponsored by admission, $6 for students. Sponsored by
Ian:
What is going on with Beat
played across the street and there were
difference? It could -be any band, you was a scene like that at the Surf Club.
.Masters of Environmental Studies The Seattle Men's Chorus. For info and
Happening right now?
know? Before... there was a lot more
people lined up all the way around the
Program
and
the
South
Puget reservations call the Lesbian, Gay and
CJ: Well, we're recording this week, sense of community about it. I mean, Some Velvet Sidewalk has been together block. I don't think you would have
Environmental Education Clearinghouse Bisexual Peoples Resource Center at 866shooting some videos at the end of now-a-days, you .go to the Mudhoney a few years. They just put out a new · found that ever in the Northwest, even
(S.P.E.E.C.H.).
6000 x6544.
December, have an album come out in
for like ... there was this band, Rail, that
show and there is 600 people. You don't album on K and have two singles ' out.
February, then go on tour in February
know any of these people. When we Al Larsen sings and plays. guitar for the
was really big here 10 years ago. But I
"CELEBRATE AGE": Is the theme for
CHOCOLATE LOVERS LINE UP: The
and March ... so we're pretty busy.
first started there was like 100 - 200 band.
don't think they would have crowds like
this week's Thursday Night Speaker Frango Restaurant at Frederick and
Ian: Is the album going . to be on K?
that even. To have people lined up
Series at Four Seasons Books, 5th and Nelson, Capital Mall, 7-10 pm. "Truffles,
people, total, who would even go to a
CJ: Its going to be on Sub Pop, and K.
around the block, not just in Seattle but
Water in Olympia. Writers younger than creams, confections, cookies and cakes
show Jike that. The biggest show we Ian: You have this new record out called
would have would be like 150 "Appetite for Extinction". Tell me about
in Olympia! ' I think that shows that there
eighteen and older than sixty featured in from Godiva, Frango, Dilettante, The
Ian: Have you been writing a lot of new people .. .like the Wipers or Black Flag. it.
is really a local audience for local music.
the "Celebrate Age" magazine will read Three ChocolatierS, Baker's
from
songs?
I always thought it was really stupid that
from
their
work.
Spbnsored by Meredith's Stationers~ Van Dam's
Now the biggest show is like 600 people, AI: We recorded it along time ago, in
CJ: Yea well we have this albums worth and their not interested in underground Olympia, in 19 ... um ... sometime in the the music people were interested in was
OFOPW AP, and if they think I'm gonna Gourmet Chocolates, and Joseph Smith,
of songs ... We did a couple of them last music, they are just going to see a lat eighties. It is a different line-up than
always somewhere else, they weren't
\
explain what that stands for again they're all with your choice of champagne,
week in Portland. You know, we've coscennceert.gOl'nThegrOenwasbackmucthhenm.ore SOofmea it is now.
saying: "Hey, look what's going on right
\'1'
plenty loco.
coffee, or milk." Tickets are $15 for the
done "Red Head Walkin'", but most of
here". They were always like: "Oh gee!
."self-controlled" or $25 for "chocoholics,"
them we haven't played live.
Were Evergreen people, a lot of Olympia Ian: So, this other guy Robert, was in
What's really cool in New York, or LA
LOS
ANGELES
POVERTY who get a commemorative poster and
gonna do them Thursday. We'll probably people. There was the Tropicana and . the band and he's from Eugene.
or Austin" They would look somewhere
\
DEPARTMENT: Yes, the other L.AP.D. even more chocolate to TAKE HOME.
do like five new songs or something.
else.
is a perfonnance group made ,up of Music provided by the Olympia
people hung-out there. It was like people AI: See, what happened is, I moved to
I have always been more into local
homeless people, past and present. Their Symphony Chamber Players; proceeds
were making the scene. Whereas now Olympia and he stayed in Eugene. So,
bands, because you can see them all
show is called "L.A.P.D. Inspects benefit the Olympia Symphony Orchestra.
Ian: So do you think there will be a big thy are just going to a concert. You for a while we kept the band going, I'd
_ _~c~ro~w
!!:d
~th~e<!:re"-,?,---:",H
~a",v",e-Jy~o",u~g""o..,ne
""-,,o'-!.
v...,,erL,12",r"et!!,ty
" 1-_u~n~de
=
rs""tan~d~th~e~diff!!!'
~er~en",c""e.i....
? _ _ _ _ _--<g!o,o"---'id~o.!!w.!!n-!th~erl.!ie'__.YJ
orL.,.....J.w~e"_'l.ld_jg~oL.Uo!Uff_ai1lDlILdL-Udou---l.lhese-times and see b~I01OPIh.----+--~.Ao4.meri~d also features-homeless---Attendance is limited.-so-calL'Z5~74.
well here in the past?
these shows in San Francisco or
And you can really start to understand
people from Seattle. At On The Boards or write the Olympia Symphony
CJ: I have no idea. You know, we never Cl: We do these shOws at the Surf club Aberdeen. But then, it didn't really work
their songs and what their songs are
in Seattle, 153 14th Avenue, toIiight Orchestra P.O. Box 7653, Olympia, WA
coming out of, like what kind of
through December 9. Call 325-7901.
98507, to reserve tickets now.
really were a big draw in Olympia ... Bui and I'd like to get it to where people are out so hot, so I got this new band
you know last time we played a show in ' coming down and checking the show out togeth.er-. Robert was kinda giving up on . community .. .! thought it was so lame that
people have to look to big cities to
Olympia ' on our own, I can't even and hanging out. And its a lot more like rock. He got really ...disillusioned with
MARC BRISTOL:
"A talented QUEL BRASS: The Masterworks Choral
decide what was important, when there
remember when it was, it was a while that than the Reko Muse ever seemed to the drums. We'd fmish playing a show
foIkplayer." Let's go. The Latona Pub, Ensemble and the Emerald City Brass
is all this stuff going on right here in
ago. We did the film festival once,two be. Because it didn't seem like people and he'd be like: "God, what am I
6423 Latona Avenue N.E., Seattle. 9 pm. Quintet unite for this conceit, printed on
their own back yard.
recycled pa ...no, that' s the poster.
or three years ago. There wasn't many felt comfortable hanging out at the Reko doing? I just go out and beat on things,
$1-2 cover charge.
Anyway, it's at 8 pm tonight at the
Muse ... at the Surf Club there is music and its not musical at all. I just beat on
people there, it was at midnight...
~:
How did Beat Happening get and stuff...!t would ~ great if people things." So he got a new band and
BRAHMS AND MORE: The Pacific Washington Center. Tickets $10,
started?
would say: "Wow! I wanna play there" learned how to play guitar, I guess he
Ian Dickson writes for this newspaper
Lutheran University Symphony Orchestra 866-0266 for info, or pick up tickets at
Seemed like the thing to and they got a band together and thinks its more musical.
CJ:
with featured violinist Irene Cheng. 8 pm . any Washington Center Outlet.
every week, and for what? "Ignorance
do ... hanging out in Olympia, playing played ...That's what was going on at the ,
isn't funny." he says.
at PLU's Eastvold Auditorium. Free. Call
CANDY CANE KID'S RUN FOR SIDS:
So now you got these new
music with our friends. It just kind of Trqpicana, and it would be cool iJ there Ian:
535-7621.
9:30 am (does anybody get up that
turned into a band. Most of the people
early?) at Capital Lake. A .35 mile sbort
we knew were just making up songs
run and a I-mile long run. Preregistration
together and this group of friends became
is ' $5 (including commemorative t-shirt)
a band. We are going to do a record of
or $3 (without (-shirt). You can also
a lot of the stuff that was happening
register at 8 am the morning of the race
around Olympia when we got started.
Ian: ' Stuff you have on tape?
"A CHRISTMAS CAROL":
The for , $6. Santa and ·his elvis will pass out ·
CJ: Yea, things that were never released
Nebraslca Theater Caravan stops at candy canes, treats, and hot cider. All
from like 1983 - 84. Some stuff Heather
Olympia's Washington Center for one runners get ribbons, pins, and a treat bag.
did with other people. A lot of the stuff
night of holiday madness and good cheer. Proceeds benefit the Washington State
Infant
Death
Syndrome
we did then is coming out on this new
If you don't know the story, get Cliff's Sudden
CD ... "Beat Happening 83 - 85". Its our
Notes right away, but don't tell anyone I Foundation. Register at Rainbow Sports
frrst stuff from our frrst single, plus a lot
told you to. 45 actors plus a four-piece or dial 943-5688 anytime, or 352-0192
of stuff we recorded at apartments around
chamber ensemble, boy this is gonna be evenings only.
town. Like the Ray, the Martin, the
something. 8 pm. Tickets $15-20, group
Thompson ...
discounts available. Local ticket outlets: RADICAL WOMEN AUcnON: Benefit
Yenny's Music and Rainy Day Music in for the National Fund Drive for Feminist
Olympia, The Bookmark in LaCey, and Sedition (l). Goodies on the bloc,k
Ian: How is Olympia different, now, as
the . Great Music Company . in Centralia. include autographed works by Rita Mae
fa( as underground musiC and stuff? '
Brown and Barbara Smith, the first issue
For info call Meg Kester at 753-8585.
of Ms. magazine, an original suffrage
LYNCH'S
INDUSTRIAL handbill, photographs, pamphlets, and
DAVID
CJ: Music that is independent, now, isn't
SYMPHONY NO.1: All ,the things you miscellaneous unique items. Dinner at
ne.cessarily underground A lot of people
could have seen if "Twin eeaks" had 6:30 pm, auction kicks off at IS. The New
who are young and into music like
been . ''The MTV Top 20 Video Freeway Hall, 5018 Rainier Avenue S.,
Mudhoney or Nirvana, they go to Fred
Countdown." Lecture Hall 3, 8 pm. Free! Seattle. Call 722-6057.
Meyer and buy that stuff, what's the
A Mindscreen Production.
MARCH AGAINST. MIDDLE EAST
..
.
.
.
,
ACUPUlfC'l11RB
The
NON-VIOLENCE TRAINING: "A must WAR: Today at 12 noon, meet at the
Evergreen
BOOKSTORE HOURS: - \
BBPBS
for people planning to take part in, civil
Federal Building, 915 2nd Avenue at
State
Hollatlc 1benopy far
Mon-l'hlIs
8:30-6:00
disobedience." Today, 10 am until around
College
Madison in Seattle. Sponsored by the
Acute lind Chronic Allmenta
c..w:red t., HartIonI ..............,
Friday 8:30-5:00
3 pm, the Environmental Resource
Seattle' Coalition for Peace in the Middle
IIARlt JAKAltDAJI PIl'ODL\II C.A.
Sofurday 10:00-2:00
Center, L3221. "Bring a lunch if
East. Call 323-6721 or 323-4912.

donn

can

30

.'

SU-8247

FRIDAY

ANNUAL HOLIDAY BOOK8ALE NOW IN PROGRESS
Winter Holiday Cards •
Giftwrap • Unique Gift Items

Bookstore

Page 12 Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

'.,.

2

, SUNDAY

"STEEL MAGNOLIAS" AUDmOI\>':
Auditions for the Abbey Players
production of "Steel Magnolias" held
today and Monday, 7 pm both evenings,
at the North Thurston High School in
Lacey. Six women will be cast; please
prepare a short monologue with Southern
dialect. For info call 754-3881 or 4568510. Rehearsals begin on January 3; the
production runs February 1st through the
9th.
COMMEMORATIVE
INTERF AITH
For the four American
SERVICE:
lean
churchwomen--Maura
Clarke,
Donovan, Ita Ford and Dorothy Kazel-killed by death squads in El Salvador, ten
years ago today. "Roses In December," a
documentary of Jean Donovan's life, will
be screened. 7 to 9 pm at Bread and
Roses Hospitality House, 1320 E. 8th in
Olympia. Call 491-7050 or 438-1771.

3

MONDAY

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL: TESC
chapter meets every Monday and
Wednesday noon to 1 pm in the lounge
area of the 2nd floor of the CAB. Letterwriting campaign continuously under way.
Call Scott 754-9180.
CHILDBIRTH REFRESHER CLASS:
Forget the fmer points? This class meets
at Black Hill Community Hospital,
beginning tonight, 7 to 9 pm, taught .be
Julia Casey, a certified child education
coordinator. Please preregister by calling
784-BABY. '
HOLIDAY CONCERT: Benefit for the
Multi-Faith AIDS Project, at First United
Methodist Church, 811 5th Avenue,
Seattle. $10. Call 525-1213 for details.
DISCOVERY
AND
VANGUARD
WORKSHOPS:
Today, 3 and 4 pm
respectively, L1406A. Call 866-6000
x6193 .
10:15 am each
TODDLER TIME:
Monday through December 10. "A perfect
introduction to group activities for
children ages 18 months to 3 years. Must
be accompanied by an adult. No
registration needed. " At the Olympia
Timberland Library, comer of 8th and
Franklin in Olympia Call 352-0595.

4

TUESDAY

LOBBYING
WORKSHOP
AND
POlLUCKFOR CHOICE:
Yvonne
Spies, the state lobbyist for Planned
Parenthood, will share battle scars and
insights with students on how to lobby
representatives. Where? L 2100, lounge.
When? 6:00pm. Open to all. Drinks
supplied, bring your own food.
For
further information call Jenn eves; 3577783.

5

WEDNESDAY

DIABETES OUT-PATIENT CLASSES:
Start today and run through December 8,
9 am to 4 pm at the Black Hills
Community Hospital, 3900 Capital Mall
Drive S.W., Olympia. Call 754-3333 to
preregister.
Come learn about
WOLFHAYEN:
wolves, foxes, and coyotes. Guided tours
Wednesday through Sunday 10 am
through 3 pm. Admission is $3 for adults
and $2 for children. Call 1-800-448WOLF.
NEWS AS FICTION: Is everything on
this page a lie? How 'bout half the
things, hm? And where's Yvonne?
Stephen Bray, free-lance writer and
Evergreen journalism teacher, is gonna
talk about how the news gets made,
ethical and political issues regarding news
management, etc. This afternoon from
12: 10 pm to 12:50 pm at the Olympia
Center, 222 N. Columbia Street in
Olympia. Call 86&6000 x6128 for info.
RAINFOREST ACTION GROUP: Every
Wednesday at 7:30 pm until such time as
global warming makes the 3rd floor pit
in the CAB melt
GEODUCK WORKSHOP: This one's on
"The Development Portfolio, Or How To
Make Everything Count." Hosted by
Leti~ia - Niet&-J.aMtSO n,
Careerr-- - Development Specialist. 4 to 5 pm in
Library 1612.
He's from Porter
RAY SWENSON:
Davis Antiques. He's speaking at the
State Capital Museum, 211 West 21st
Avenue at 12:10 pm. Call 753-1998 or
753-2580.
ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS:
Meeting every Wednesday 5:30 pm to 7
pm in L2103.

6

THURSDAY

THE DERELICTS, DESCENT, AND
THE JIMMIES: Narf fun for slam

people . . The Derelicts, keepers of the
hardcore flame, have a new single out,
"Somebody's Goona Get Their Head
MEXiCAN
ARTIST
EXHIBIT:
Kicked
In" (is that the Rubber City
Fulgencio Lazo, a Zapoteco Indian from
Rebels
song?).
Descent hails from Oly,
Oaxaca, exhibits oil paintings, lithographs,
are 'from Longview.
the
Jimmies
~d wood prints today through December
.
Longview
has
a
band
scene? You need to
14 at El Centro De La Raza, 2524 16th
see
this
show.
$5
at
the
North Shore Surf
Avenue South in Seattle. Call 329-2974.
Club 116 E. 5th Avenue in Olympia. 8
pm.
CPR CLASS: At Mark Reed Hospital, 1
to 5 pm. Ten people only, fmt registered,
RADICAL WOMEN AGAIN: Today's
frrst served. $5 fee. ' Call 495-3244 or
meeting features a speaker from Mothers
482-3244.
Against Police Harassment. Hearty dinner
served at 6:30 pm, for $5 donation.
PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: 10:15 am
Meeting starts at 7:30. New Freeway
each Tuesday through December 11 at
Hall, 5018, Rainier Avenue S., Seattle.
the Tumwater Timberland Library. Call
For info, rides, or childcare call 722943-7790.
6057.
DAY CARE STORYTIME: Same as
above but different. A 20-minute
Jane
ME JANE YOU AMAZON:
presentation of books and activities. Call . E vershed, . C<;.o-feminist, _s.l~riS posters
today from 5 to 8 pm, Market Graphics,
the Youth Services Department of the
Library at 352-0595, or stop by the
1935 1st Avenue in Seattle. Informal
library at the comer o( 8th and Franklin
discussion follows, refreshments served.
in Olympia
Call 441-7732.

Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

Page 13

News
groWth, from cover
growth to' 3200 FI'E if the Library is
expanded as required and if offices for
emeritus and early-retirement faculty are
provided. The decision has been made to
request planning money for a , new
. multipurpose building to serve our needs
and the needs of the area. Contingent
upon ' compatibility with the Office of
Financial Management capital instructions,
a TESC planning group in 1991-92 wou1d
design the building.

Conscious Choice About Growth
.'. In the ' absence of a thoughtfu1
response to sustained pressure for
enrollment growth, we run the risk of
growing haphazardly.
Growth has come to the College in
small increments during the past eight
years. Since 1982-83, Evergreen's
enrollment has increased by nearly 800
FI'E--an average of 100 per year. The
1991-93 budget request includes growth
at roughly the same pace: 75 FI'E per
year. Current thinking of the HEC Board
sets growth rates at an average of 1% per
year for the next 20 years. There is a
tendency to absorb modest increments of
growth on an annual basis without full
consideration of the effects on the
College over time.
.The College needs to decide whether
or not to grow beyond 3200 FI'E and to
develop either viable justifications for
opting away from growth or plans for the
form growth shou1d take.
To guard against the dangers of
"incremental expansion," we need to
identify a response to sustained pressure
for enrollment growth. Central questions
the Planning Council has discussed, and
floW places before the community, are:
/"What should our enrollment be in the
year 2000?" and "What kind of college
do we want to be?"

To Grow or Not To Grow

Finally, a definition for FTE
Full-time enrollment (FTE) is a .
measure of students registered at
Evergreen. It Is calculated by adding
undergraduate
quarter-hour
all
equivalencies and dividing by 15, and
adding all graduate. quarter-hour. .
equivalencies and dividing by 10. The
sum of these two figures gives the
FTE for a particular qu.arter.
The 15 "credit" divisor for
undergraduates is used because 15
credits is the state-wide standard for
Relative to certain purposes, such as
critical mass in certain areas of study, or
gender
equity
or
multicjlltural
representation, growth is necessary.
. As a state college, we have a
responsibility to respond to educational
needs in the area. But, the prospect of
substantial and/or rapid growth raises a
variety of concerns in the Evergreen
community. The size of the College, even
with a substantial infusion of support
dollars, threatens ' a sense of community,
informality, and the possibility of
participatory governance valued by many
on campus.
In preliminary conversations with the .
campus constituencies, we have heard
that growth, even the growth we have
experienced already, raises the question
of whether or not we can remain the
community we have been. The Planning
Council takes that concern seriously.
Growth without new buildings will
require more regimented scheduling of
classrooms and sharing of faculty office
space. Growth with new buildings will
have a substantial environmental impact
on the campus and the surrounding area.

Options for Growth

There are many possible responses
to the pressure for enrollment growth.
The fITst question we face is whether or
not to grow beyond 3200 FI'E. For some,
that choice is conditioned upon the form
that growth might take. A preliminary
discussion of the advantages and
disadvantages to growth beyond 3200 is

Note that new buildings are required
for the fust four options.
.Expand the curriculum as currently
configured to 3500 FfE. This option
assumes no major changes in the
offerings or organization of the College.
We would add students and faculty until
we reached 3500 FI'E. We would draw
~w..-.--:IlIat--diseussion-is--the-line-on--additional growl1la( iliat
followed by brief descriptions of a few
point If the state became convinced of
forms growth beyond 3200 might take.
the need for additional educational
We need community responses in
options in this region, we would advise
them to build another college.
the following areas: (1) whether or not
to grow beyond 3200 FfE; (2) to react
This option responds to the pressure
and add to the pros and cons listed
for growth but sets a limit to the amount
with the growth options; and (3) to add
of growth. It provides the state with
to our list of options for growth beyond
some lead time to plan for growth in the
3200 FTE.
region beyond the 3500 FI'E at
Growth Pros and Cons
Evergreen. This option does not address
Many aspects of growth are positive.
the campus concern that 'growth to 3200;"

full-time students.
For the 1990-1991 academic year
Evergreen's
state-fUnded
annual
average enrollment is 3100. FTE for
fall quarter is 3310; but averaged with
winter and spring quarter FTEs the
annual ' average is expected to be at
the 3100 target.
Fall quarter head count'~
number of registered full- and
time students, is 3340. --SAR

much less beyond, erodes our sense of
community.
Growth to 3500 FI'E may seem too
modest to warrant the capital outlay
required for new buildings and lead to a
legislative decision to cap enrollment at
3500 within existing facilities.
•Develop Clones of the College
Accept the pressure to grow by
setting up contiguous, similar but
essentially autonomous, colleges with
maximum enrollments of 2500-3000 each.
Each college would share facilities like
the Library, CAB, Rec . Center and
administrative services. This option
responds to the pressure for enrollment
growth but attempts to preserve the
values
of
small-scale
learning
communities within each college. It could
even allow for colleges with enrollments
below our current size.
This
model
could
reduce
administrative costs in the operational
budget by spreading costs over a
considerably
larger
student
FIE
enrollment The President and others
knowledgeable about the politics and
economics of higher education in this
state view the economic impact of this
option as incompatible with the branch
campus planning already underway by the
UW and the HEC Board and therefore as
the least viable in the current political
arena.
•Add a Weekend/Evening College
This option assumes the College's
daytim~ curriculum remains about the
same-size-as-iris now. Our response to
increased enrollment demand would be
made through a Weekend/Evening
College growing to as large as 600 FTE.
This option has the advantage of
responding directly to the unmet needs of
"placebound adults" who have attracted
Legislative attention. It could serve to
reduce pressure from the legislature for
enrollment growth within the current
daytime curriculum by providing a fairly
immediate response to placebound adults. '""\"~
'(CW~A '.
. . ~/ ../ I. 'oe.\T€:\<- ~ E
"I

""~
,ryJ~-:rl-~~;-~-_

~

.
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

"'"

CLASSIFIED

rt-

It is possible that teaching in a
Weekend/Evening College wou1d be
The Fascist Chemists by Morgan Evans
conceived as a faculty-development
opportunity.
.
Week(~nd/Evening College provides
an
opportunity
for' programl'l)atic
responses more tailored to the needs of
adults in the area. This. option does not
address enrollment pressure from the
traditional college-age students, who will
require full-time, dsytime offerings and
whose numbers will increase dramatically
in the future. While we have experience
with eveoing/weekend programs in
Vancouver and Tacoma, and on a small
scale in Olympia, a part-time curriculum
serving 600 FI'E ~tudents (likely to
Dogear by Shannon Gray.
amount to 1200+ head count) is a major
new undertaking. It cou1d be argued that
if we agree to grow on the Olympia
campus, that growth oUght to build on
what we already do well--a full-time,
daytime interdisciplinary curriculum.
The
Weekend/Evening
option
contains the risk that we would move
toward two separate faculties and student
bodies. There is a possibility that staff
and facilities would not be funded at the
same level as a new college and that this
under-funding would generate increases in
workloads.
·Clone Option Plus Weekend
Bullets Are Cheap by Edward Martin III
Evening
This option combines the second and
Toby's experlroet1ts i.n usin9
third proposals described above. It holds
..
Pyrnmld Po w 9r') to sharpen .
open the possibility· of shifting (or
raiLor blades C.OITlQ5 to Q\'\ •
expanding) emphasis from part-time,
placebound students to full-time, daytime
a.bru.pt ,halt VII.h(ll"' J er\tirltl)'
students as growth in the traditional
by a.ccident, he ~noc.ks out
college-age population places enrollment
Ot\& of thQ
support~ . .
demands on the College.
·The No-Growth Option
Resist all efforts to make us grow .
beyond 3200 FTE. on the grounds that
such growth will erode the quality of
education and with that, our institutional
JIr.r:..t.AQ\lf J-....i.3 0 PPI
values. This option deserves real
consideration. It takes a hard stance
God Is a Rabbit by Ron Austin
against further erosion of community
GENDER TIME
Mea WDMo..n~
values attributed to growth. It is probably
the most difficult position to defend with
in t.,e 9Q..r d.en •••
J
the Legislature and would require very
solid arguments including satisfactory
W'hG'~ ~~~~ Me
strategies fO[Jlddressing..educationaLneed.:>-----..,.---I7i;~
~
~~
~,
~~..·- - --++-------;
;;; 9< .J
independent of Evergreen. This option
I'
~
";) _ u" ..._.well...
'I, 'l'~ J We 1/ •••
also requires that other objectives (e.g.
~J. -< ·~h ~ .
141-,.-.
multiculturalism and gender equity) must
1~ ~
.
,
P'I'" daInty
. ,- ~
My ' IAY~e.
~ 7
be obtained within 3200 FI'E.
5
.Other Options: To c.omment or
Finjer
describe new options contact the Planning
v-v..
"::
Council c/o Steve Hunter in the Provost's
\/
Office, Library 3131.
L-_~~_ _ _ _---I

"

.sDM £'

r(

, _!.uC~£"r-

~_,c..LJTS

--Comics
The Future of Evergreen by Paul H. Henry

,ljDVff'<18ER1

GET

o UTA

1-1 £RE l
$1tJDENT Go

~@

to_:'I~
' ~(~'" \\cnes:h~Ajr~

kEVIN rX)/JIltLLY) A
Co rv VFR.T[D Jtw 8 0(lAl
TO IRI5fj-G(HjoLIC
PMENiS; P£TlrJOIJ 'S Tf.if
~tAC6 OF THE STu/Xl.l1
GOV£fl. NMENT 1t> /..f=T
IH,vI

JoIN

n.H~ ]Ei.I.115/-/ ·

A""E~CMJ CULTUR4L..
C"'u c u~ BUT WHEN

HE IS UN48LE TD
r;::=~~ P~DUC[ A Pf{)Ir;RfE
HrS APPUCA TJON 15
Df:NLEO AND Hf I5
FO (l.C Gil

TO

P..EIr1-'lllJ

OF

TfE WEEK)

WI4ITE.

Existence by Scott Hungerford

(GuEST CARTOONIST

CREDIT
CARD
. OPcR.A-n::p

GUJ'l1BALL
MACH/N f 5

GOD?

.J'N:

"'WI..,."

L

1"IQ 2

rip oyFieattler-lrene Davis

. IY

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"'__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.........

Omnivore' by Sri
\

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\oV \+1 L£ Tli E: R '" '5
~-50M E LE:. FT ' -

.--

.

ADS
Personals

Wanted
CLASSIFIED RATES:
30 word. or less - $3.00
10 cent. for each additional word
PRE-PAYMENT REQUIRED
Classified Deadline - 2 pm Monday

them away. give them to Dan in 0114 or call

866-9926.
f
NEEDED: Rolo-tiller. pick axes. and seed
spreader. Call Tedd al88&-8000 118213, and
lers make a deal.


TO PLACE AN AD:
PHONE 866-6000 X6054
~ .
STOP BY THE CPJ, US 2510
SENq INFO TO CPJ, TESC, UB
OLYMPIA, WA 98505

Vocalist/Performance Artist desires non-

functioning kitchen appliance.. Don't throw

2510

Housing
I have a house to share on t ~8astside,
$275.00 plus utilities, own bath. Nonsmoker, drug & frog free, responsible
person. Please call Ruth at 786-6905.

SPERM DONOR WANTED. Musl bewillitlg 10
have medicallBsting and sign legal contract.
Fees negotiable. Serious inquiries only please.
Write: Donor. PO Box 2-403, 2103 Harrison NW,
Olympia, WA 98502.

Help Wanted
-

Finding Your Voioe--Manifesting Your Vision . A
. six-week therepy group focused on new models for
Power & Leadership for Women. For more info call
Julia Brayshaw or Peggy Goldberg 956-9285.
PROTEST U.S. NAVY'S CRUEL, UNETHICAL.
ABUSIVE USE OF DOLPHINS FOR MILITARY
PURPOSESI SEND LETTERS CALLING FORAN
IMMEDIATE HALT OF SUCH PRACTICES TO:
PRES. GEORGE BUSH, 1600 PENNSYLVANIA
AVE NW.WASHINGTON. D.C, 20500. FOR MORE
INFO CONTACT PAWS: 206-743-1884.
Tough paying for college? We can still help you
gel scholarship/grant/loan money. We actually
GUARANTEE ill Call 357-1203 ext. 311 for free
detail • . Recorded message 24-hours.

NANNIES

"

1-8OO-66W128
East Coast. Airfarv paid.
Classic Nannies (1974) Ltd.

Page 14 Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

ALERTII A rash of mountain bike thefts have hit
campus reoently. Security encourages you 10 license your bike ,.... of charge and to lock it.

, laughlin~ by Joel Hilliker

Lost and Found ·

(GuEST CARToot-lST)

VLA1t1 ~F ~ttil

Loat: Pair of black' ralnbowo<:olored glo_.
perhaps left in bar of woman doing photo essay
on women. Leave mag. at x6054 on how retum
can be arranged. Thanks.

IvIATTHEW PIPES



1"190

Tommy the Troubled Teen by Brian Zastoupil

(GUEST CARTOONIST)

1.1

Found: A silver & turquoise snake earring in
TESC C-Iol. II dangles. If yours. call 956-3257.

Found : AtlectionalB black & whilB ma" kitten.
Needs home of his own. safe from the residenl
bully feline. Call ~775 .
;

<.on St'4}\icn(cS

.of

1"'7

FourRHCUed Kiltena Need a Good Home.
Two Siamese cross and two grey tabbies.
Have shots and wormed. Call 753-6458 days
and 446-2185 evening •.

5cnOJl'1

~

rcMAI r'\

+c..~(.

<\

+h~r

~«-,<\II~
Conc.IOV~,

+COlt

V'\ll t.1 '\ '" _
YI-\ t Y\ c/ cd

AffectionalB, mild-mannered. part Black Lab pup
needs a Happy. Loving Home. Call 9560547.
THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP I THERE IS NO CHARGE
FOR LOSTIFOUNfllSTOlENIFREE ClASSIFIEDS.

~-

l~d"'ldo",- \

"Listen to that! This tree is jus.t
an insect SMORGASBORD!"

0\1\

of

~ oflNcn+t~
c.C!..1'\

-+\.1 o"1.j

...

-7

Cooper Point Journal November 29, 1990

Page 15